This volume supplements <b>Volumes 63, 64, 87, and 249</b> of <b>Methods in Enzymology</b>. These volumes provide a basic source for the quantitative interpretation of enzyme rate data and the analysis of enzyme catalysis. Among the major topics covered are Engergetic Coupling in Enzymatic Reactions
The Enzyme Catalysis Process: Energetics, Mechanism and Dynamics
β Scribed by Giorgio Careri (auth.), Alan Cooper, Julien L. Houben, Lisa C. Chien (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 479
- Series
- Progress in Mathematics
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This volume represents the proceedings of a NATO Advanced Studies Instituteheld near Barga (Italy), July 11-23, 1988, involving over 90 participants from more than twelve countries of Europe, North America and elsewhere. It was not our intention at this meeting to present a complete up-to-the-minute review of current research in enzyme catalysis but tΒ·ather, in accord wi th the intended spiri t of NATO ASis, to gi ve an opportunity for advanced students and researchers in a wide variety of disciplines to meet tagether and study the problern from different points of view. Hence the lectures cover topics rauging from the purely theoretical aspects of chemical reaction kinetics in condensed matter through practical experimental approaches to enzyme structure, dynamics and mechanism, including the new experimental opportunities arising from genetic engineering techniques. Our approachwas unashamedly physical, both because the more biochemical aspects of enzymology are amply covered elsewhere and because progress in our understanding and application of the molecular basis of enzymic processes must ultimately come from advances in physical knowledge. We tried to cover as wide a spectrum as possible, and succeeded in gathering an expert and enthusiastic team of speakers, but there . are some inevitable omissions. In particular, and with hindsight, our discussions might have been enriched by more detailed coverage of general aspects of chemical catalysis - but readers requiring this background should find adequate references herein.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-ix
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Enzyme Catalysis: An Overview from Physics....Pages 3-9
Enzyme Catalysis: The View from Physical Chemistry....Pages 11-21
Front Matter....Pages 23-23
Proteins: Interactions and Dynamics....Pages 25-40
Theories of Protein Folding....Pages 41-53
Structural and Functional Properties of Consecutive Enzymes in the Glycolytic Pathway....Pages 55-68
The Spectroscopy of Enzymes: Introductory Remarks....Pages 69-77
Introduction to Vibrational Spectroscopy β From the Normal Mode to the Local Mode: Infrared, Raman and Inelastic Neutron Scattering....Pages 79-91
Nonlinear Coupling and Vibrational Dynamics....Pages 93-102
Low Frequency Dynamics of Proteins Studied by Inelastic Neutron Scattering....Pages 103-122
The Fluorescence Properties of Aromatic Amino Acids: Their Role in the Understanding of Enzyme Structure and Dynamics....Pages 123-139
The Application of 1 H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy to the Study of Enzymes....Pages 141-158
Thermodynamic Fluctuations and Function in Proteins....Pages 159-171
Using Resonance Raman Spectroscopy to Study the Structure and Dynamics of Enzyme-Bound Substrates....Pages 173-195
Structural Distributions, Fluctuations and Conformational Changes in Proteins Investigated by MΓΆssbauer Spectroscopy and X-Ray Structure Analysis....Pages 197-221
Enzyme Hydration and Function....Pages 223-234
Percolation Processes....Pages 235-246
Statical and Dynamical Properties of Macromolecular Solutions....Pages 247-271
Front Matter....Pages 273-273
Introduction to the Basic Concepts in Reaction Dynamics....Pages 275-282
The Role of the Environment in Chemical Reactions....Pages 283-292
Proton Transfer Reactions....Pages 293-303
Front Matter....Pages 273-273
Microscopic Simulations of Chemical Reactions in Solutions and Protein Active Sites; Principles and Examples....Pages 305-330
The Concept of the Potential of Mean-Force in Enzyme Catalysis....Pages 331-343
Theoretical Calculations on an Enzyme Catalyzed Reaction Mechanism....Pages 345-355
Highly Excited Vibrational States and Chemical Reactivity....Pages 357-365
Front Matter....Pages 367-367
Microcalorimetry of Protein-Ligand Interactions....Pages 369-381
Structure and Dynamics of Phospholipid Membranes from Nanoseconds to Seconds....Pages 383-412
The Impact of Recombinant DNA Techniques on the Study of Enzymes....Pages 413-426
Site Directed Mutagenesis as a Tool to Study Enzyme Catalysis....Pages 427-442
Enzymes as Catalysts in Organic Synthesis....Pages 443-463
Enzymes in Non-Aqueous Systems....Pages 465-475
Back Matter....Pages 477-493
β¦ Subjects
Biochemistry, general
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>This enzymology textbook for graduate and advanced undergraduate students covers the syllabi of most universities where this subject is regularly taught. It focuses on the synchrony between the two broad mechanistic facets of enzymology: the chemical and the kinetic, and also highlights the sy
This enzymology textbook for graduate and advanced undergraduate students covers the syllabi of most universities where this subject is regularly taught. It focuses on the synchrony between the two broad mechanistic facets of enzymology: the chemical and the kinetic, and also highlights the synergy
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