Abstract

The autolysis of trypsin and alpha-chymotrypsin is accelerated in the presence of colloidal silica and glass surfaces. It is proposed that adsorption of the enzymes (favoured by electrostatic factors) results in a conformational change that renders the adsorbed enzyme more susceptible to proteolytic attack. Although the adsorbed enzymes are more susceptible to proteolysis, their activity towards low-molecular-weight substrates is not affected, indicating a relatively minor conformational change on adsorption. The rates of autolysis in solution (i.e. in ;inert' vessels) are second-order for both trypsin and alpha -chymotrypsin, with rate constants of 13.0mol(-1).dm(3).s(-1) for trypsin (in 50mm-NaCl at pH8.0 at 25 degrees C) and 10.2mol(-1).dm(3).s(-1) for alpha-chymotrypsin (in 0.1m-glycine at pH9.2 at 30 degrees C). In glass vessels or in the presence of small areas of silica surface (as colloidal silica particles), the autolysis of both trypsin and alpha-chymotrypsin can show first-order kinetics. Under these conditions, saturation of the surface occurs and the fast surface proteolytic reaction controls the overall kinetic order. However, when greater areas of silica surface are present, saturation of the surface does not occur, and, since for a considerable portion of the adsorption isotherm the amount adsorbed is approximately proportional to the concentration in solution, second-order kinetics are again observed. A number of negatively charged macromolecules have been shown similarly to increase the rate of autolysis of trypsin: thus this effect, observed initially with glass and silica surfaces, is of more general occurrence when these enzymes adsorb on or interact with negatively charged surfaces and macromolecules. These observations explain the confusion in the literature with regard to the kinetics of autolysis of alpha-chymotrypsin, where first-order, second-order and intermediate kinetics have been reported. A further effect of glass surfaces and negatively charged macromolecules is to shift the pH-activity curve of trypsin to higher pH values, as a consequence of the effective decrease in pH in the ;microenvironment' of the enzyme associated with the negatively charged surface or macromolecule.

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