AbstractLinear free energy relationships can be used to link the changes in rate constant for a reaction to changes in the equilibrium caused by alterations in structure. While they have most often been used in the analysis of chemical reactions, they have also been employed to resolve questions in enzymology and protein folding. Here we analyze the reaction of a serpin with a panel of six serine proteinases, and observe that a linear free energy relationship exists between the true second-order rate constant for reaction, kinh, and the inhibition constant, KI, indicating that formation of the covalent serpin–enzyme complex may be reversible
Serpins inhibit serine proteases by mechanically disrupting the protease active site. The protease f...
Cooperativity is one of the "paradigms" in enzyme kinetics and molecular biology. But the ...
AbstractSerine proteinase inhibitors (Serpins) are irreversible suicide inhibitors of proteases that...
AbstractLinear free energy relationships can be used to link the changes in rate constant for a reac...
AbstractThe X-ray crystal structure of the serpin–proteinase complex suggested that the serpin defor...
Experiments on mutants of tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase have shown that there can be linear free energy re...
AbstractPAI-1 is a proteinase inhibitor, which plays a key role in the regulation of fibrinolysis. I...
AbstractProteinase inhibition by serpins requires a 70 Å translocation of the proteinase, circumvent...
Serpins, serine proteinase inhibitors, are a large family of structurally homologous proteins. The p...
AbstractThe essential roles of proteins of the serpin family in many physiological processes, along ...
Serpins form a family of structurally related proteins, many of which function in plasma as inhibito...
Serpins are a superfamily of structurally linked proteins with interesting functional properties. Mo...
AbstractBackground: The inhibitors that belong to the serpin family are widely distributed regulator...
Serine proteinase inhibitors (serpins) form enzymatically inactive 1:1 complexes with their target p...
BackgroundIntermolecular backbone H-bonding (NH…OC) is a common occurrence at the interface of prote...
Serpins inhibit serine proteases by mechanically disrupting the protease active site. The protease f...
Cooperativity is one of the "paradigms" in enzyme kinetics and molecular biology. But the ...
AbstractSerine proteinase inhibitors (Serpins) are irreversible suicide inhibitors of proteases that...
AbstractLinear free energy relationships can be used to link the changes in rate constant for a reac...
AbstractThe X-ray crystal structure of the serpin–proteinase complex suggested that the serpin defor...
Experiments on mutants of tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase have shown that there can be linear free energy re...
AbstractPAI-1 is a proteinase inhibitor, which plays a key role in the regulation of fibrinolysis. I...
AbstractProteinase inhibition by serpins requires a 70 Å translocation of the proteinase, circumvent...
Serpins, serine proteinase inhibitors, are a large family of structurally homologous proteins. The p...
AbstractThe essential roles of proteins of the serpin family in many physiological processes, along ...
Serpins form a family of structurally related proteins, many of which function in plasma as inhibito...
Serpins are a superfamily of structurally linked proteins with interesting functional properties. Mo...
AbstractBackground: The inhibitors that belong to the serpin family are widely distributed regulator...
Serine proteinase inhibitors (serpins) form enzymatically inactive 1:1 complexes with their target p...
BackgroundIntermolecular backbone H-bonding (NH…OC) is a common occurrence at the interface of prote...
Serpins inhibit serine proteases by mechanically disrupting the protease active site. The protease f...
Cooperativity is one of the "paradigms" in enzyme kinetics and molecular biology. But the ...
AbstractSerine proteinase inhibitors (Serpins) are irreversible suicide inhibitors of proteases that...