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1.
Using Gibbs Energies of compounds, as well as Gibbs Energy changes and equilibrium constants of biochemical reactions, the contributions of functional groups to the Gibbs Energy (in aqueous solution, temperature 25°C, and pH=7) have been estimated. These contributions allow the estimation of the Gibbs Free Energy and the equilibrium constant of a biochemical reaction, given the structure of the reactants and products.  相似文献   

2.
Levels of thermodynamic treatment of biochemical reaction systems.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Equilibrium calculations on biochemical reaction systems can be made at three levels. Level 1 is the usual chemical calculation with species at specified temperature and pressure using standard Gibbs energies of formation of species or equilibrium constants K. Level 2 utilizes reactants such as ATP (a sum of species) at specified T, P, pH, and pMg with standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of reactants or apparent equilibrium constants K'. Calculations at this level can also be made on the enzymatic mechanism for a biochemical reaction. Level 3 utilizes reactants at specified T, P, pH, and pMg, but the equilibrium concentrations of certain reactants are also specified. The fundamental equation of thermodynamics is derived here for Level 3. Equilibrium calculations at this level use standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of reactants at specified concentrations of certain reactants or apparent equilibrium constants K". Level 3 is useful in calculating equilibrium concentrations of reactants that can be reached in a living cell when some of the reactants are available at steady-state concentrations. Calculations at all three levels are facilitated by the use of conservation matrices and stoichiometric number matrices for systems. Three cases involving glucokinase, glucose-6-phosphatase, and ATPase are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The best way to store data on apparent equilibrium constants for enzyme-catalyzed reactions is to calculate the standard Gibbs energies of formation of the species involved at 298.15 K and zero ionic strength so that equilibrium constants can be calculated at the desired pH and ionic strength. These calculations are described for CoA, acetyl-CoA, oxalyl-CoA, succinyl-CoA, methylmalonyl-CoA, malyl-CoA and CoA-glutathione. The species properties are then used to calculate standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation for these reactants as functions of pH at ionic strength 0.25 M. The species data also make it possible to calculate apparent equilibrium constants of 23 enzyme-catalyzed reactions as a function of pH, including some that cannot be determined directly because they are so large.  相似文献   

4.
The standard Gibbs energies of formation of species in the guanosine triphosphate and the xanthosine triphosphate series have been calculated on the basis of the convention that the standard Gibbs energy of formation for the neutral form of guanosine is equal to zero in aqueous solution at 298.15 K and zero ionic strength. This makes it possible to calculate apparent equilibrium constants for a number of enzyme-catalyzed reactions for which apparent equilibrium constants have not been measured or cannot be measured directly because they are too large. The eventual elimination of this convention is discussed. This adds ten reactants to the database BasicBiochemData3 that has 199 reactants. The standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of these ten reactants are used to calculate apparent equilibrium constants at 298.15 K, 0.25 M ionic strength, and pHs 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. The pKs, standard Gibbs energies of hydrolysis, and standard Gibbs energies of deamination are given for the reactants in the ATP, IMP, GTP, and XTP series.  相似文献   

5.
The standard Gibbs energies of formation of species in the cytidine triphosphate series, uridine triphosphate series, and thymidine triphosphate series have been calculated on the basis of the convention that Delta(f)G=0 for the neutral form of cytidine in aqueous solution at 298.15 K at zero ionic strength. This makes it possible to calculate apparent equilibrium constants for a number of reactions for which apparent equilibrium constants have not been measured or cannot be measured because they are too large. This paper adds fifteen reactants to the database BasicBiochemData3 at MathSource that includes 199 reactants. The standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of these fifteen reactants are used to calculate apparent equilibrium constants at 298.15 K, ionic strength 0.25 M, and pHs 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 for thirty two reactions. The pKs, standard Gibbs energies of hydrolysis, and standard Gibbs energies of deamination are given for these fifteen reactants.  相似文献   

6.
Chemical equations are normally written in terms of specific ionic and elemental species and balance atoms of elements and electric charge. However, in a biochemical context it is usually better to write them with ionic reactants expressed as totals of species in equilibrium with each other. This implies that atoms of elements assumed to be at fixed concentrations, such as hydrogen at a specified pH, should not be balanced in a biochemical equation used for thermodynamic analysis. However, both kinds of equations are needed in biochemistry. The apparent equilibrium constant K' for a biochemical reaction is written in terms of such sums of species and can be used to calculate standard transformed Gibbs energies of reaction Δ(r)G'°. This property for a biochemical reaction can be calculated from the standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation Δ(f)G(i)'° of reactants, which can be calculated from the standard Gibbs energies of formation of species Δ(f)G(j)° and measured apparent equilibrium constants of enzyme-catalyzed reactions. Tables of Δ(r)G'° of reactions and Δ(f)G(i)'° of reactants as functions of pH and temperature are available on the web, as are functions for calculating these properties. Biochemical thermodynamics is also important in enzyme kinetics because apparent equilibrium constant K' can be calculated from experimentally determined kinetic parameters when initial velocities have been determined for both forward and reverse reactions. Specific recommendations are made for reporting experimental results in the literature.  相似文献   

7.
Two measurements of equilibrium constants by Marshall and Cohen make it possible to calculate standard Gibbs energies of formation of the species of carbamate and carbamoyl phosphate. Carbamate formation from carbon dioxide and ammonia does not require an enzyme, and the equilibrium concentrations of carbamate in ammonium bicarbonate are calculated. Knowing the values of standard Gibbs energies of formation of species of carbamate and carbamoyl phosphate make it possible to calculate the dependencies of the standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of these reactants on pH and ionic strength and to calculate apparent equilibrium constants for several enzyme-catalyzed reactions and several chemical reactions. These calculations are sufficiently complicated that computer programs in Mathematica are used to make tables and plots. The dependences of apparent equilibrium constants on pH are consequences of the production or consumption of hydrogen ions, which are shown in plots. As usual the increase in the number of enzyme-catalyzed reactions for which apparent equilibrium constants can be calculated is larger than the number of reactions required to obtain the thermodynamic properties of the species involved.  相似文献   

8.
The use of G' in discussing the thermodynamics of biochemical reactions at a specified pH and pMg is justified by use of a Legendre transform of the Gibbs energy G. When several enzymatic reactions occur simultaneously in a system, the standard transformed Gibbs energies of reaction delta rG'0 can be used in a computer program to calculate the equilibrium composition that minimizes the transformed Gibbs energy at the specified pH and pMg. The calculation of standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of reactants at pH 7 and pMg 3 is described. In addition a method for calculating the equilibrium concentrations of reactants is illustrated for a system with steady state concentrations of some reactants like ATP and NAD.  相似文献   

9.
Apparent equilibrium constants K' of biochemical reactions at pH 7 and standard apparent reduction potentials of half reactions at pH 7 can be calculated using a table of standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation Delta(f)G'(0) at pH 7. A table is provided for 136 reactants at 25 degrees C, pH 7, and ionic strengths of 0, 0.10, and 0.25 M. Examples are given to illustrate the use of the table.  相似文献   

10.
Since the standard Gibbs energies of formation are known for all the species in the purine nucleotide cycle at 298.15 K, the functions of pH and ionic strength that yield the standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of the ten reactants can be calculated. This makes it possible to calculate the standard transformed Gibbs energies of reaction, apparent equilibrium constants, and changes in the binding of hydrogen ions for the three reactions at desired pHs and ionic strengths. These calculations are also made for the net reaction and a reaction that is related to it. The equilibrium concentrations for the cycle are calculated when all the reactants are initially present or only some are present initially. Since the concentrations of GTP, GDP, and P(i) may be in steady states, the equilibrium concentrations are also calculated for the system at specified steady-state concentrations.  相似文献   

11.
Water plays a role in the thermodynamics of dilute aqueous solutions that is unusual in two ways. First, knowledge of hydration equilibrium constants of species is not required in calculations of thermodynamic properties of biochemical reactants and reactions at specified pH. Second, since solvent provides an essentially infinite source of oxygen atoms in a reaction system where water is a reactant, oxygen atoms are not conserved in the reaction system in dilute aqueous solutions. This is related to the fact that H2O is omitted in equilibrium expressions for dilute aqueous solutions. Calculations of the standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of total carbon dioxide and total ammonia at specified pH are discussed, and the average bindings of hydrogen ions by these reactants are calculated by differentiation. Since both of these reactants are involved in the urease reaction, the apparent equilibrium constants and changes in the numbers of hydrogen ions bound are calculated for this reaction as functions of pH.  相似文献   

12.
R A Alberty  R N Goldberg 《Biochemistry》1992,31(43):10610-10615
The criterion for chemical equilibrium at specified temperature, pressure, pH, concentration of free magnesium ion, and ionic strength is the transformed Gibbs energy, which can be calculated from the Gibbs energy. The apparent equilibrium constant (written in terms of the total concentrations of reactants like adenosine 5'-triphosphate, rather than in terms of species) yields the standard transformed Gibbs energy of reaction, and the effect of temperature on the apparent equilibrium constant at specified pressure, pH, concentration of free magnesium ion, and ionic strength yields the standard transformed enthalpy of reaction. From the apparent equilibrium constants and standard transformed enthalpies of reaction that have been measured in the adenosine 5'-triphosphate series and the dissociation constants of the weak acids and magnesium complexes involved, it is possible to calculate standard Gibbs energies of formation and standard enthalpies of formation of the species involved at zero ionic strength. This requires the convention that the standard Gibbs energy of formation and standard enthalpy of formation for adenosine in dilute aqueous solutions be set equal to zero. On the basis of this convention, standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation and standard transformed enthalpies of formation of adenosine 5'-trisphosphate, adenosine 5'-diphosphate, adenosine 5'-monophosphate, and adenosine at 298.15 K, 1 bar, pH = 7, a concentration of free magnesium ions of 10(-3) M, and an ionic strength of 0.25 M have been calculated.  相似文献   

13.
Gibbs free energy is the thermodynamic potential representing the fundamental equation at constant temperature, pressure, and molar amounts. Transformed Gibbs energies are important for biochemical systems because the local concentrations within cell compartments cannot yet be determined accurately. The method of Constrained Gibbs Energies adds kinetic reaction extent limitations to the internal constraints of the system thus extending the range of applicability of equilibrium thermodynamics from predefined constraints to dynamic constraints, e.g., adding time-dependent constraints of irreversible chemical change. In this article, the implementation and use of Transformed Gibbs Energies in the Gibbs energy minimization framework is demonstrated with educational examples. The combined method has the advantage of being able to calculate transient thermodynamic properties during dynamic simulation.  相似文献   

14.
Estimation of standard Gibbs energy changes of biotransformations   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Contributions and corrections for the estimation of standard Gibbs energies are given. The group contribution method, applicable to both cyclic and acyclic compounds, permits the approximate estimation of the standard Gibbs energy of a biotransformation, given the stoichiometry and structures of the metabolites involved. Estimated standard Gibbs energies of formation for a number of acyclic biochemical compounds are provided.  相似文献   

15.
Alberty RA 《Biochemistry》2004,43(30):9840-9845
Recent thermodynamic measurements have made it possible to calculate the apparent equilibrium constants of the ribonucleoside diphosphate reductase reaction and the ribonucleoside triphosphate reductase reaction with various reducing agents. Third law heat capacity measurements on crystals of d-ribose and other calorimetric measurements make it possible to calculate Delta(f)G degrees for D-ribose and two species of D-ribose 5-phosphate. The experimental value of the apparent equilibrium constant K' for the deoxyribose-phosphate aldolase reaction makes it possible to calculate the standard Gibbs energies of formation Delta(f)G degrees for two protonation states of 2'-deoxy-D-ribose 5-phosphate. This shows that Delta(f)G degrees (2'-deoxy-D-ribose 5-phosphate(2)(-)) - Delta(f)G degrees (D-ribose 5-phosphate(2)(-)) = 147.86 kJ mol(-1) at 298.15 K and zero ionic strength in dilute aqueous solutions. This difference between reduced and oxidized forms is expected to apply to D-ribose, D-ribose 1-phosphate, ribonucleosides, and ribonucleotides in general. This expectation is supported by two other enzyme-catalyzed reactions for which apparent equilibrium constants have been determined. The availability of Delta(f)G degrees values for the species of 2'-deoxy-D-ribose and its derivatives makes it possible to calculate standard transformed Gibbs energies of formation of these reactants, apparent equilibrium constants for their reactions, changes in the binding of hydrogen ions in these reactions, and standard apparent reduction potentials of the half reactions involved as a function of pH and ionic strength at 298.15 K. The apparent equilibrium constant for ADP + thioredoxin(red) = 2'-deoxyADP + H(2)O + thioredoxin(ox) is 1.4 x 10(11) at 298.15 K, pH 7, and 0.25 M ionic strength.  相似文献   

16.
Changes in Gibbs energies of metabolic reactions of glycolysis and Krebs cycle have been calculated from literature data including G, pK values, and complex formation constants values. Neutral, charged species and Mg-complexes are included in the data base. Results show that most of the reactions investigated proceed near thermodynamic equilibrium conditions whereas the reactions out of equilibrium are related to the metabolic regulation and seem associated with cyclic sequences or with parallel pathways. Examples of fructose 6-phosphate/fructose 1,6-diphosphate cycle and phosphotranferase system and hexokinase are presented.  相似文献   

17.
It is of interest to calculate equilibrium compositions of systems of biochemical reactions at specified concentrations of coenzymes because these reactants tend to be in steady states. Thermodynamic calculations under these conditions require the definition of a further transformed Gibbs energy G" by use of a Legendre transform. These calculations are applied to the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction plus the citric acid cycle, but steady-state concentrations of CoA, acetyl-CoA and succinyl-CoA cannot be specified because they are involved in the conservation of carbon atoms. These calculations require the use of linear algebra to obtain further transformed Gibbs energies of formation of reactants and computer programs to calculate equilibrium compositions. At specified temperature, pH, ionic strength and specified concentrations of several coenzymes, the equilibrium composition depends on the specified concentrations of the coenzymes and the initial amounts of reactants.  相似文献   

18.
A 33-residue pseudo-wild-type GCN4 leucine zipper peptide is used to probe the equilibrium conformational population in proteins. 13Calpha-NMR shows that chain sites differ in structural content at a given temperature, and that two dimeric folded forms are evident at many sites. Spin inversion transfer experiments are reported bearing on the thermodynamics and kinetics of interconversion of the two dimeric folded forms (Fa <--> Fb) at the 13Calpha-labeled position L13. At each temperature, at conditions wherein the population of unfolded chains is quite small, inversion of the Fa spins via a tuned Gaussian pi-pulse is followed by a time interval (tau), interrogation, and recording of the free induction decay. Fifteen such inversions, with varying tau, provide the time course for recovery of equilibrium magnetization after inversion. Similar experiments follow inversion of the Fb spins. Re-equilibration is known to be modulated by four first-order rate constants: two (T1a(-1) and T1b(-1)) for spin-lattice relaxation intrinsic to the respective sites, and two (kab and kba) for the conformational change. All four follow from joint, Bayesian analysis of all the data at each temperature. The equilibrium constant at each temperature for this local transition, determined simply from the equilibrium relative magnetizations at Fa and Fb sites, agrees well with the kinetic ratio kab/kba. The standard Gibbs energies, enthalpy, and entropy follow. Activation parameters, both ways, are accessible from the rate constants and suggest a transition state with high Gibbs energy and enthalpy, but with entropy between those of Fa and Fb.  相似文献   

19.
Standard Gibbs energies of reactions are increasingly being used in metabolic modeling for applying thermodynamic constraints on reaction rates, metabolite concentrations and kinetic parameters. The increasing scope and diversity of metabolic models has led scientists to look for genome-scale solutions that can estimate the standard Gibbs energy of all the reactions in metabolism. Group contribution methods greatly increase coverage, albeit at the price of decreased precision. We present here a way to combine the estimations of group contribution with the more accurate reactant contributions by decomposing each reaction into two parts and applying one of the methods on each of them. This method gives priority to the reactant contributions over group contributions while guaranteeing that all estimations will be consistent, i.e. will not violate the first law of thermodynamics. We show that there is a significant increase in the accuracy of our estimations compared to standard group contribution. Specifically, our cross-validation results show an 80% reduction in the median absolute residual for reactions that can be derived by reactant contributions only. We provide the full framework and source code for deriving estimates of standard reaction Gibbs energy, as well as confidence intervals, and believe this will facilitate the wide use of thermodynamic data for a better understanding of metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
The binding of sodium n-dodecyl sulphate to catalase has been measured by equilibrium dialysis in the pH range 3.2 to 10.0. On the acid side of the isoelectric point (pH 5.4) the surfactant anions initially bind to cationic sites on the protein and subsequent binding is cooperative. At high pH on the alkaline side of the isoelectric point only cooperative binding is observed. The binding data have been combined with protein titration curves to calculate the Gibbs energies of formation of protein titration curves to calculate the Gibbs energies of formation of protein surfactant proton complexes. Contributions to the Gibbs energies of complex formation by surfactant and protein binding have been estimated. The average Gibbs energies of surfactant binding to specific cationic sites are ca. 28 kJ mol?1 and for cooperative binding ca. 15 kJ mol?1.  相似文献   

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