Phosphagen kinases achieve “buffering” of cellular ATP levels by catalyzing the reversible transfer of a phosphoryl group from ATP to a guanidino acceptor to form a high energy compound, phosphagen. Creatine kinase (CK), a PK found mainly in vertebrates, exists as a dimer in muscles; whereas, arginine kinase (AK), found exclusively in invertebrates, exists mainly as a monomer. The physiological functions of different oligomerization states within the PK family are not fully understood. Crystal structures of dimeric CK and AK are consistent with cooperativity in ligand binding between the two subunits. Based on these results, a reciprocating mechanism of catalysis was suggested for dimeric PKs. However, the exact mechanism and the potential effects of negative cooperativity on ligand binding ability of dimeric PKs remains unexplained. In this study, we’ve shown direct functional evidence of negative cooperativity in rabbit muscle CK (rbCK) by measuring the enzymes’ affinity for MgADP using isothermal titration calorimetry. Measurements of rbCK‐ligand interactions, in presence of saturating concentrations of creatine and nitrate, to form the transition‐state analogue quaternary complex, were fitted using a two‐site binding model with Kd1 = 56 ± 32 µM and Kd2 = 2.7 ± 1.4 mM. In the absence of creatine and nitrate, MgADP binding by rbCK fits a one‐site binding model, with Kd = 720 ± 330 µM. These suggest that the presence of creatine enables the conformation necessary to permit cross‐talk between the subunits. Pre‐steady state kinetic assays and the effect of viscosity on kcat show that the rate‐limiting step of reaction catalyzed by PKs is dependent on the oligomerization state of the enzyme, consistent with the alternating site of reactivity mechanism.Grant Funding Source: NSF Grant #0619123