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Line Weaver Burk

Lineweaver-Burk plots are double reciprocal plots that can be used to analyze enzyme kinetics according to the Michaelis-Menten scheme. The plot results in a linear relationship that allows the determination of the kinetic constants Km and Vmax. Additionally, Lineweaver-Burk plots can help distinguish between ping-pong and ternary complex reaction mechanisms in bisubstrate systems. The effects of different types of enzyme inhibitors can also be visualized using these plots, where competitive inhibitors increase Km but not Vmax, noncompetitive inhibitors decrease Vmax but not Km, and mixed inhibitors affect both parameters.

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deepika kanojiya
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
383 views1 page

Line Weaver Burk

Lineweaver-Burk plots are double reciprocal plots that can be used to analyze enzyme kinetics according to the Michaelis-Menten scheme. The plot results in a linear relationship that allows the determination of the kinetic constants Km and Vmax. Additionally, Lineweaver-Burk plots can help distinguish between ping-pong and ternary complex reaction mechanisms in bisubstrate systems. The effects of different types of enzyme inhibitors can also be visualized using these plots, where competitive inhibitors increase Km but not Vmax, noncompetitive inhibitors decrease Vmax but not Km, and mixed inhibitors affect both parameters.

Uploaded by

deepika kanojiya
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lineweaver-Burk's double reciprocal plot

Michaelis-Menten scheme
Vmax [S]
v0 = 1 = Km + [S] = Km 1 + 1
Km + [S] v0 Vmax [S] Vmax [S] Vmax this follows a
y = mx + b
formula

y m x b
slope y-intercept
1
an interesting graphical application:
v0 in bisubstrate systms, a Lineweaver-Burk plot can help to distinguish
y intercept is 1/Vmax whether a ping-pong mechanism (one substrate attached to the enzyme at a
* time) or ternary complex (ES1S2) forms during the catalytic event.
increasing S2 increasing S2
substrates meet
slope is Km/Vmax during the 1
mechanism 1 ping-pong v0
v0
* 1
substrates do
not meet
[S] *
x intercept is -1/Km
1 1
[S1] [S1]
Thinking about the intercepts:
When x = 0, 1/[S] approaches 0, or [S] is increasing to an infinite level,
it makes sense that Vmax is attained there (think of the end of the v0 vs [S] plot)
When y = 0, you are really thinking about the highest possible rate of reaction, but [S] can never be 0, much less
negative, so this is only a hypothetical situation we are taking advantage of in order to solve for these constants
(think of the beginning v0 vs [S] plot when S approaches 0 and the slopes of that initial linear part of the curve are
maximized)
Changing an enzyme's behavior by adding an inhibitor (i.e. a drug).
1 Compare the efficiencies of the original enzyme and the new one (dashed).
v0 The new plot has same Vmax but Km has increased (1/Km decreased)
worse enzyme - higher Km means it takes more [S] to be saturated, even
* though it ultimately can still attain the same Vmax
Efficiency is kcat/Km, so efficiency is lower
This effect would be seen if the enzyme were treated with a drug that competes
with substrate for the enzyme's active site (competitive inhibitors)
* 1
1
[S] v0 Lower Vmax and the same Km
Efficiency is lower
The new one affects * (noncompetitive inhibitors are
1
Km and Vmax very rare, usually seen in two-
v0
Seems as though Km substrate systems)
* 1

* decreases!
only because the drug
[S]
binds ES 1
Typically the result is a v0
Lower Vmax and higher Km
worse enzyme overall Efficiency is lower
*
* 1 (uncompetitive
inhibitors)
(mixed inhibitors because drug
binds to both ES and E) looks like
[S] a mix of non- and competitive
* 1
EXTREMELY common)
[S] Nolta 2009

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