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Cho, Yoon-Kyoung
FRUITS Lab.
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Catalytic enzymes are active matter

Author(s)
Jee, Ah-YoungCho, Yoon-KyoungGranick, SteveTlusty, Tsvi
Issued Date
2018-11
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1814180115
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/25492
Fulltext
https://www.pnas.org/content/115/46/E10812
Citation
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, v.115, no.46, pp.E10812 - E10821
Abstract
Using a microscopic theory to analyze experiments, we demonstrate that enzymes are active matter. Superresolution fluorescence measurements-performed across four orders of magnitude of substrate concentration, with emphasis on the biologically relevant regime around or below the Michaelis-Menten constant-show that catalysis boosts the motion of enzymes to be superdiffusive for a few microseconds, enhancing their effective diffusivity over longer timescales. Occurring at the catalytic turnover rate, these fast ballistic leaps maintain direction over a duration limited by rotational diffusion, driving enzymes to execute wormlike trajectories by piconewton forces performing work of a few kBT against viscosity. The boosts are more frequent at high substrate concentrations, biasing the trajectories toward substrate-poor regions, thus exhibiting antichemotaxis, demonstrated here experimentally over a wide range of aqueous concentrations. Alternative noncatalytic, passive mechanisms that predict chemotaxis, cross-diffusion, and phoresis, are critically analyzed. We examine the physical interpretation of our findings, speculate on the underlying mechanism, and discuss the avenues they open with biological and technological implications. These findings violate the classical paradigm that chemical reaction and motility are distinct processes, and suggest reaction-motion coupling as a general principle of catalysis.
Publisher
NATL ACAD SCIENCES
ISSN
0027-8424
Keyword (Author)
enzymechemotaxisactive matterfluorescence correlation spectroscopycatalytically induced mobility
Keyword
CROSS-DIFFUSIONMOLECULAR MOTORCHEMOTAXISACETYLCHOLINESTERASEMECHANISMDRIVENFORMSPOLYMERASEMODEL

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