Understanding Enzyme Efficiency: The Role of kcat and Km Values

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around enzyme efficiency, specifically focusing on the relationship between kcat and Km values, and how these parameters influence the effectiveness of enzymes in catalyzing reactions. Participants explore theoretical implications, experimental observations, and the nuances of enzyme kinetics.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Experimental/applied

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that kcat/Km represents enzyme efficiency, but question whether two enzymes with the same kcat/Km can be considered equally effective if their kcat values differ.
  • One participant explains that if enzyme A has a higher kcat, enzyme B must have a lower Km to maintain the same kcat/Km ratio, suggesting that enzyme B has a stronger substrate affinity.
  • Another participant raises the possibility that two enzymes could catalyze reactions at the same rate despite differences in kcat and Km, expressing uncertainty about predicting reaction rates based solely on kcat/Km.
  • A participant shares experimental findings indicating that a modified enzyme with a larger kcat/Km still catalyzes reactions slower than another enzyme, prompting questions about the meaning of kcat/Km in terms of effectiveness.
  • One participant discusses the idea that kcat/Km also reflects substrate specificity, suggesting that a high kcat with a weak substrate affinity may not equate to high efficiency, as it could lead to less effective substrate binding.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the interpretation of kcat/Km and its implications for enzyme efficiency. There is no consensus on whether kcat/Km alone can determine enzyme effectiveness, as experimental data challenges some assumptions.

Contextual Notes

Participants note limitations in their understanding of enzyme kinetics, particularly regarding the relationship between kcat, Km, and observed reaction rates. The discussion highlights the complexity of enzyme behavior and the potential for variability in experimental outcomes.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to biochemists, molecular biologists, and students studying enzyme kinetics and catalysis, particularly those exploring the nuances of enzyme efficiency and substrate specificity.

schordinger
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kcat/Km is representing the enzyme efficiency, isn't it?

however, if two enzyme have same value of kcat/Km, but if one of them have value of kcat smaller than the other, is they are really equally effective??

why not the smaller kcat enzyme have a lower efficiency ?
 
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So we have two different enzymes, A and B, both with the same value of kcat/KM. If let's say enzyme A has a higher value of kcat, then in order to have an equivalent ratio enzyme B must have an appreciably smaller value of KM. This means that enzyme B has an very strong affinity for its substrate and is not likely to be as promiscuous with its binding as enzyme A. So the decrease in one property of the enzyme has its slack taken up by its other property - so for enzyme A, its weaker affinity is made up by its higher turnover.

That's about as simple an explanation as I can offer.
 
I see...
but could that two enzyme catalyze reaction at same rate?

or it is impossible to predict, with only knowing kcat/Km ?

actually, I am studying some kinetics of a modified enzyme, and found that the reaction proceed slower than original one, but the kcat/Km of the modified one is larger...
 
There's nothing inherently preventing two enzymes from catalyziing their respective reactions at the same rate. My brain is shutting down on me right now, but I'm sure there have to be at least two different enzymes that catalyze their respective chemistry at the same rate. Someone else can do the favor of providing us with a specific example. :)

I'm confused - if you have kcat, why would you need to do any prediction? That number tells you the turnover of substrate into product per unit time (typically per second).

I would figure that your modified enzyme has a higher affinity (lower KM) then. Is that correct?
 
"kcat/Km" of the two enzyme is indeed different...

Let me describe a bit more detial...

what I have done was comparing two modified enzymes, one of it (just call it enzyme A) has smaller kcat and Km value.
However, the kcat/Km is larger than the other (say, enzyme B).

Experimental data showed that reaction catalyzed by enzyme A is slower than enzyme B, even kcat/Km of A is larger than B...

that make me wonder what "kcat/Km" really means... :smile:
say, larger "kcat/Km" means more effective, what is "more effective" ?, just faster ? if so, it cannot explain my experimental data...(or my data have problem ^_^)...
 
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In some regard, kcat/KM is also a measure of the enzyme's substrate specificity, which is more nuanced of an idea than just efficiency. This connects both the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate as well as the rate at which the enzyme can actually do the chemistry.

What matters is the ratio of the two values. You can have an absurdly high kcat, but if the enzyme has only a weak affinity for the substrate (high KM), then it is not as efficient as an enzyme with a smaller kcat but a significantly smaller KM. In the first case, yes, the rate of reaction is very fast but the enzyme is not very specific in its substrate binding and so spends a good deal of time messing about with other substrates, and so is not very efficient. In the second case, the enzyme is far slower but spends more of its time working with the proper substrate. (Apologies for the slight anthropomorphization.)

So in your case, enzyme A may be slower, but its substrate affinity makes up for it so that most of the substrate which is bound is the proper substrate. Your enzyme B - which is faster but has a smaller kcat/KM - doesn't have as strong as an affinity and so doesn't work nearly as efficiently.

Is this starting to make sense now?

Must be off to lunch...
 

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