Regulation

Enzyme Regulation

Metabolic pathways must be tightly regulated to meet cellular needs. Enzyme activity can be modulated at multiple levels: gene expression, covalent modification, allosteric control, and zymogen activation.

1. Allosteric Regulation

Allosteric enzymes have regulatory sites separate from the active site. Binding of allosteric effectors changes the enzyme's conformation, altering its catalytic rate.

  • Positive effectors (activators): Increase enzyme activity. Example: AMP activates Phosphofructokinase-1 (signals low energy).
  • Negative effectors (inhibitors): Decrease activity. Example: ATP and citrate inhibit PFK-1 (signals high energy).
  • Feedback inhibition: End product inhibits first committed step (most common). Example: Isoleucine inhibits threonine deaminase.
  • Concerted (symmetry) model (MWC): All subunits flip simultaneously between T (tense, low activity) and R (relaxed, high activity) states.
  • Sequential (KNF) model: Induced fit; each subunit changes conformation independently upon ligand binding → cooperativity.

2. Covalent Modification

Reversible addition of functional groups to specific amino acid residues. The most important is phosphorylation/dephosphorylation by protein kinases and phosphatases.

  • Phosphorylation of Ser, Thr, or Tyr residues.
  • Effect depends on the enzyme — can activate or inactivate.
  • Glycogen Phosphorylase: Phosphorylated (by Phosphorylase kinase) → Active form (breaks down glycogen).
  • Glycogen Synthase: Phosphorylated → Inactive form. (Insulin activates a phosphatase to dephosphorylate and activate it.)
  • Other modifications: Acetylation, Methylation, Ubiquitination, ADP-ribosylation.

3. Zymogen Activation (Proteolytic Cleavage)

Enzymes are synthesized as inactive precursors (zymogens) and activated by irreversible proteolytic cleavage. This ensures enzymes are only active where needed (prevents autodigestion).

  • Pepsinogen → Pepsin (stomach, by HCl/pepsin autocatalysis)
  • Trypsinogen → Trypsin (by Enteropeptidase/enterokinase in duodenum)
  • Prothrombin → Thrombin (blood clotting cascade)
  • Pro-insulin → Insulin (removal of C-peptide in β-cells)

4. Regulatory Proteins

  • Calmodulin: Ca²⁺-binding protein; activated by Ca²⁺ → activates calmodulin-dependent kinases.
  • G-proteins: Activated by receptor → activate adenylyl cyclase → ↑cAMP → PKA activation cascade.

5. Quantity of Enzyme (Genetic Regulation)

Induction/repression of enzyme synthesis. Example: Insulin induces glucokinase synthesis; fasting induces PEPCK for gluconeogenesis. This is slower regulation (hours) compared to allosteric (seconds).

Key Regulatory Enzymes to Know

  • Glycolysis: PFK-1 (rate-limiting), Hexokinase, Pyruvate Kinase
  • Gluconeogenesis: PEPCK, Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, Glucose-6-phosphatase
  • Glycogenolysis: Glycogen Phosphorylase
  • Fatty acid synthesis: Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase (ACC)
  • Cholesterol synthesis: HMG-CoA Reductase

Quiz - Exam Preparation Strategy

When studying Quiz for your final board exams, it is critical to focus on the core concepts and fundamental formulas. Relying strictly on NCERT textbook solutions and practicing previous year questions (PYQs) is the proven methodology for scoring high marks. Avoid rote memorization and instead focus on the logical application of the theories presented in this chapter.

⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How can I quickly memorize the concepts of Quiz?

The most effective way is to create short, handwritten revision notes and continuously test your knowledge using our interactive Mock Tests. Spaced repetition and active recall are much better than passive reading.

What type of questions are most commonly asked from Quiz?

Board exams tend to favor conceptual application questions and direct formula-based derivations from the NCERT syllabus. Ensure you have solved every single exercise in the official textbook.

Is reading the NCERT book enough for this chapter?

Yes, the NCERT textbook is the absolute gold standard for board exams. However, to improve your speed and accuracy during the actual exam, you must supplement your reading by solving timed mock tests and objective questions.