In biology, enzymes have evolved over millions of years to drive chemical reactions. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization (MPI-DS) now derived universal rules to enable the de novo design of optimal enzymes. As an example, they considered the enzymatic reaction of breaking a dimer into two monomer molecules. Considering the geometry of such an enzyme-substrate-complex, they identified three golden rules that should be considered to build a functional enzyme.
First, the interface of both enzyme and molecule should be located at their respective smaller end. This way, a strong coupling between both of them can be achieved. For the same reason, the conformational change in the enzyme should not be smaller than in the reaction. Finally, the conformational change of the enzyme has to take place fast enough to maximize the chemical driving force of the reaction.
“We built our research on two main pillars,” Ramin Golestanian, director of MPI-DS describes the approach. “Conservation of momentum and coupling between the reaction coordinates,” he continues. Thus, the researchers expanded the view of a classical 2-dimensional reaction coordinate. Typically, models for enzymatic reactions define an energy barrier that has to be overcome in order for the reaction to take place.
“As in our model we also consider the enzyme dynamics and coupling, we go beyond this existing concept, considering two reaction coordinates,” say Michalis Chatzittofi, first author of the study. “Instead of overcoming an energy barrier, one can now imagine alternative ways to bypass it by taking alternative routes,” he concludes.
These results provide a new basis for the design of molecular machines, avoiding the tedious and technically challenging approach to simulate the dynamics of each atom individually.
COIMBATORE: A protest in Tamil Nadu left behind an awkward truth for the election season…
Ford’s former EV boss shared an image of the company’s canceled three-row electric SUV on…
As computing demands continue to surge, scientists are exploring the quantum world for smarter ways…
The first electric C-Class has 473 miles (762 kilometers) of WLTP range. It has all-wheel drive…
For more than two centuries, scientists tried and failed to grow dolomite in the lab…
The Porsche GT3 911 RS with the Manthey Kit lapped the Nürburgring in 6 minutes…