98
chapter6 
Enzymes 
1: 
General Properties, Kinetics, and Inhibition
of (1 + [I] /
Ki
) (Table 6-2). Uncompetitive inhibition 
is rarely observed in single-substrate reactions. A 
noteworthy example in clinical enzymology is the 
inhibition of intestinal alkaline phosphatase by 
L-phenylalanine. Uncompetitive inhibition is more 
common in two-substrate reactions with a 
double-displacement reaction mechanism.
Irreversible Inhibition
Irreversible inhibition occurs when the inhibitor reacts at 
or near the active site of the enzyme with covalent mod-
ification of the active site or when the inhibitor binds so 
tightly that, for practical purposes, there is no dissocia-
tion of enzyme and inhibitor. The latter situation occurs 
in the case of proteinase inhibitors (see below). Thus, 
physical separative processes are ineffective in removing 
the irreversible inhibitor from the enzyme. Irreversible in-
hibitor reaction is written
E + I -»• El (inactive enzyme)
Examples of irreversible inhibitors of enzymes are:
1. Enzymes that contain free sulfhydryl groups at the 
active site (e.g., glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate 
dehydrogenase; see Chapter 13) react with an 
alkylating reagent, iodoacetic acid, resulting in 
inactivation of the enzyme.
Enzyme-SH + ICH2COOH -*
Iodoacetic acid
enzyme-S —
CH2COOH + HI
Inactive covalent derivative of enzyme
The imidazole ring of histidine also undergoes 
alkylation on reaction with iodoacetate. In 
ribonucléase, two residues (His 12 and His 119) are 
alkylated with loss of activity when the enzyme is 
treated with iodoacetate at pH 5.5.
2. Enzymes with seryl hydroxyl groups at the active 
sites can be inactivated by organophosphorous 
compounds. Thus, diisopropylphosphofluoridate 
(DPF) inactivates serine hydrolases by 
phosphorylation at the active site:
A specific example is inactivation of 
acetylcholinesterase (Table 6-1), which catalyzes 
hydrolysis of acetylcholine to acetate and choline. 
Acetylcholine is a 
neurotransmitter,
a chemical 
mediator of a nerve impulse at a junction—known as 
a 
synapse
—between two neurons or between a 
neuron and a muscle fiber. On arrival of a nerve 
impulse at the ending of the neuron, acetylcholine 
(which is stored in the vesicles of the presynaptic 
nerve terminal) is released. The released
H3C 
CH3
w
c
I
0
1
Enzyme-CH2-OH + F— P = 0
Active seryl 
I
residue 
0
i
C
/ H
\
H3C 
CH3
Diisopropylphosphofluoridate
(DPF)
^ H F
H3C 
CH3
\ H /
c
I
0
1
Enzyme— CH2— O— P = 0
I
0
1
c
/
h\
H3C 
CH3
acetylcholine acts on the postsynaptic membrane to 
increase the permeability of Na+ entry across the 
membrane. Depolarization results in the inside of the 
membrane becoming more positive than the outside; 
normally, the inside of the membrane is more negative 
than the outside. This process may propagate an 
action potential along a nerve fiber, or it may lead to 
contraction of a muscle (Chapter 21). Acetylcholine is 
quickly destroyed by acetylcholinesterase present in 
the basal lamina of the neuromuscular junction 
(Figure 
6
-
8
). If, however, acetylcholine is not 
destroyed, as in the case of inactivation of 
acetylcholinesterase by DPF, its continued presence 
causes extended transmission of impulses. In muscle 
fibers, continuous depolarization leads to paralysis. 
The cause of death in DPF intoxication is respiratory 
failure due to paralysis of the respiratory muscles 
(including the diaphragm and abdominal muscles). 
Several organophosphorous compounds are used as 
agricultural insecticides, improper exposure to which 
can result in toxic manifestations and death.
Knowledge of the mechanisms of action of acetyl-
cholinesterase and of the reaction of organophosphorous 
compounds with esterases led to the development of drugs 
useful in the treatment of this kind of intoxication. The ac-
tive site of acetylcholinesterase consists of two subsites: