BCH2011 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Covalent Bond, Reaction Intermediate, Rate Equation

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In most enzymes, the binding energy used to form the es complex is just one of the several contributors to the overall catalytic mechanism. Once a substrate is bound to an enzyme, properly positioned catalytic functional groups aid in the cleavage and formation of bonds by a variety of mechanisms, including general acid-base catalysis, covalent catalysis, and metal ion catalysis. These are distinct from mechanisms based on binding energy, because they generally involve transient covalent interaction with a substrate or group transfer to or from a substrate. A proton transfer is the single most common reaction in biochemistry. One or, often, many proton transfers occur in the course of most reactions that take place in cells. Many biochemical reactions involve the formation of unsatable charged intermediates that tend to break down rapidly to their constituent reactant species, thus impeding the reaction.

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