Big-Daddy said:
that's fine, but how was I supposed to know that this would be a valid approach? All the question says is steady-state approximation, but that normally applies only to intermediates, not to every form of the enzyme ...
if you have several species all interconnected by chemical reactions then if you think about it (preferably with a particular example in mind) if they are not all in a steady state none of them can be.
Big-Daddy said:
If this sort of thing is commonly done, can you refer me to a book where I can find more treatments "off the back" of steady-state which are not simply straightforward applications of the steady-state approximation but rather, like this case, require me to apply a constant-concentration assumption to species which are not merely intermediates?
See above. And have you not been through yet competitive inhibition by and inhibitor I which has a scheme similar to that in your attachment but with a form EI instead of ES
2?
I do not encourage you to think the way to understand a single point that can be explained in less than a page is to wade through a whole book. Where is your item quoted in #1 from? - it looks quite conventional. Then you can find treatments in general biochemistry books, then in an enzymology book like Fersht (from memory, I don't have any books by me at this moment). Probably the most used book at the moment on enzyme kinetics is that by Cornish-Bowden (but wider than just steady-state). There is a summary here:
http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/teaching/courses/csb/CSB_lecture_enzyme_kinetics.pdf Best of all is to work things out yourself with the books ore for hints or indications.
Big-Daddy said:
Also, is there a general message to take from this lesson? Such as: "to express rate in terms of the concentration of a certain initial concentration via a mass balance, you must apply the steady-state approximation to all species within the mass balance for that element - and can then find rate in terms of the initial concentration of that element, and potentially any of the time-dependent concentrations of species not in the mass balance for that element" - in other words, in order to ensure that [E], [ES] and ES2 do not show up in the final rate equation we apply the steady-state approximation to each of them (and would do the same to any other species we do not want to show up in the final approximate rate equation). Hence in this case we must apply the steady-state approximation for E, ES and ES2 to get rate in terms of [E]0 and, to be precise, in terms of anything but [E], [ES] and ES2.
A bit of a mouthful!
I'd say take the case where there is just one enzyme species, ES, that decomposes into product.(Easy to extend to other cases). Then we'll have, as already, something like
Rate = k
cat[ES]
Then get what fraction [ES] is of all the enzyme species present, which total is constant. All means all, why not? If anything is converted into something which you call 'not an intermediate' that affects the reaction rate - there is less enzyme in the ES form.
Finally for this dead end ES
2 you were stumbling with, if you have anything like
A ⇔ B then after sufficient time you end up with [A] = (k
BA/k
AB)
(with obvious notation).
This will still be true if B is in equilibrium with something else.
It will still be true of A is in equilibrium with something else.
And it will still be true if B is not in equilibrium with something else but in a steady state as long as A is a dead end - or indeed on a chain of reactions just leading to a dead end.
When there is also another process Z ← A as well as the above it gets more complicated.