4.6 Article

Simplified yet highly accurate enzyme kinetics for cases of low substrate concentrations

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 276, Issue 19, Pages 5491-5506

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2009.07233.x

Keywords

biochemical system reduction; enzyme kinetics; quasi-steady-state approximation; slow invariant manifold; zero-derivative principle

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation
  2. NWO [NWO/EW/635.100.007, NWO/EW/639.031.617]
  3. BBSRC
  4. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/C008219/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Much of enzyme kinetics builds on simplifications enabled by the quasisteady-state approximation and is highly useful when the concentration of the enzyme is much lower than that of its substrate. However, in vivo, this condition is often violated. In the present study, we show that, under conditions of realistic yet high enzyme concentrations, the quasi-steady-state approximation may readily be off by more than a factor of four when predicting concentrations. We then present a novel extension of the quasisteady- state approximation based on the zero-derivative principle, which requires considerably less theoretical work than did previous such extensions. We show that the first-order zero-derivative principle, already describes much more accurately the true enzyme dynamics at enzyme concentrations close to the concentration of their substrates. This should be particularly relevant for enzyme kinetics where the substrate is an enzyme, such as in phosphorelay and mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. We illustrate this for the important example of the phosphotransferase system involved in glucose uptake, metabolism and signaling. We find that this system, with a potential complexity of nine dimensions, can be understood accurately using the first-order zero-derivative principle in terms of the behavior of a single variable with all other concentrations constrained to follow that behavior.

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