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Monday, August 30, 2021

08-29-2021-2036 - oxyanion hole

An oxyanion hole is a pocket in the active site of an enzyme that stabilizes transition state negative charge on a deprotonated oxygen or alkoxide.[1] The pocket typically consists of backbone amides or positively charged residues. Stabilising the transition state lowers the activation energy necessary for the reaction, and so promotes catalysis.[2] For example, proteases such as chymotrypsin contain an oxyanion hole to stabilise the tetrahedral intermediate anion formed during proteolysis and protects substrate's negatively charged oxygen from watermolecules.[3] Additionally, it may allow for insertion or positioning of a substrate, which would suffer from steric hindrance if it could not occupy the hole (such as BPG in hemoglobin). Enzymes that catalyse multi-step reactions can have multiple oxyanion holes that stabilise different transition states in the reaction.[4] 

Oxyanion hole of a serine protease(black) stabilises negative charge build-up on the transition state of the substrate (red) using hydrogen bonds from enzyme's backbone amides (blue).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxyanion_hole

above. 

BALADA TRISTE DE TROMPETA- RAPHAEL



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