Wikibooks: Biochemistry/Catalytic Strategies/Acid Base reactions

=Introduction to acid base catalysis reactions= This type of catalysis involves proton donors or acceptors other than water. There is then a nucleophilic or electrophilic attack. Finally the enzyme is then restored. The donation or acceptance of protons is generally to stabilize the transition state...

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spelling ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:37596:216314 2023-06-18T03:40:10+02:00 Wikibooks: Biochemistry/Catalytic Strategies/Acid Base reactions https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Biochemistry/Catalytic_Strategies/Acid_Base_reactions eng eng Book ftwikibooks 2023-06-02T13:41:25Z =Introduction to acid base catalysis reactions= This type of catalysis involves proton donors or acceptors other than water. There is then a nucleophilic or electrophilic attack. Finally the enzyme is then restored. The donation or acceptance of protons is generally to stabilize the transition state. A corollary to this is metal ion catalysis which involves a metal ion that stabilizes the transition state with its positive charge. Some acid base catalysis reactions also use metal ions. One common amino acid present in most enzymes that acts as an acid or a base is histidine since its pKa is close to that of the surrounding pH. Thus it can act as either an acid or a base. One example is with carbonic anhydrase that breaks down carbonic acid into a proton and a bicarbonate ion. H 2 CO 3 H + HCO 3 There is a part at the active site of carbonic anhydrase that contains a Zinc ion (Zn 2+ ) that is coordinated to a few histidine R groups. The Zinc also coordinates with the oxygen of a water molecule. When Zinc is coordinated with a water molecule the pKa reduces from 15.7 to about 7. Thus this means that at the physiological pH the water molecule readily deprotonates. Now this Oxygen atom acts as a nucleophile attacking the carbon of a carbon dioxide. This creates a complex coordination compound attached to the Zinc ion resembling the bicarbonate ion. In the final step another water molecule replaces the biocarbonate ion and the enzyme is reformed ready to react again. BookCat Book Carbonic acid WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
institution Open Polar
collection WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
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description =Introduction to acid base catalysis reactions= This type of catalysis involves proton donors or acceptors other than water. There is then a nucleophilic or electrophilic attack. Finally the enzyme is then restored. The donation or acceptance of protons is generally to stabilize the transition state. A corollary to this is metal ion catalysis which involves a metal ion that stabilizes the transition state with its positive charge. Some acid base catalysis reactions also use metal ions. One common amino acid present in most enzymes that acts as an acid or a base is histidine since its pKa is close to that of the surrounding pH. Thus it can act as either an acid or a base. One example is with carbonic anhydrase that breaks down carbonic acid into a proton and a bicarbonate ion. H 2 CO 3 H + HCO 3 There is a part at the active site of carbonic anhydrase that contains a Zinc ion (Zn 2+ ) that is coordinated to a few histidine R groups. The Zinc also coordinates with the oxygen of a water molecule. When Zinc is coordinated with a water molecule the pKa reduces from 15.7 to about 7. Thus this means that at the physiological pH the water molecule readily deprotonates. Now this Oxygen atom acts as a nucleophile attacking the carbon of a carbon dioxide. This creates a complex coordination compound attached to the Zinc ion resembling the bicarbonate ion. In the final step another water molecule replaces the biocarbonate ion and the enzyme is reformed ready to react again. BookCat
format Book
title Wikibooks: Biochemistry/Catalytic Strategies/Acid Base reactions
spellingShingle Wikibooks: Biochemistry/Catalytic Strategies/Acid Base reactions
title_short Wikibooks: Biochemistry/Catalytic Strategies/Acid Base reactions
title_full Wikibooks: Biochemistry/Catalytic Strategies/Acid Base reactions
title_fullStr Wikibooks: Biochemistry/Catalytic Strategies/Acid Base reactions
title_full_unstemmed Wikibooks: Biochemistry/Catalytic Strategies/Acid Base reactions
title_sort wikibooks: biochemistry/catalytic strategies/acid base reactions
url https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Biochemistry/Catalytic_Strategies/Acid_Base_reactions
genre Carbonic acid
genre_facet Carbonic acid
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