An example of this model is seen with the enzyme pyruvate kinase of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a
bacterium that is perfectly suited to adapt to living in the macrophages of humans. The enzyme's sites serve as a communication between different substrates. Specifically between
AMP and
G6P. Sites like these also serve as a sensing mechanism for the enzyme's performance.
Positive modulation Positive allosteric modulation (also known as
allosteric activation) occurs when the binding of one
ligand enhances the affinity of other binding sites. An example is the binding of
oxygen molecules to
hemoglobin, where oxygen is both the physiological ligand and the modulator (or effector). Here, the allosteric, or "other", site is the equivalent binding site of another
protein subunit. The binding of oxygen to one subunit induces a conformational change in that subunit that interacts with the remaining binding sites to enhance
their oxygen affinity. This type of allosteric modulation is also known as homotropic allostery or cooperativity as it describes the allosteric interaction between equivalent sites in an oligomeric protein. Another example of allosteric activation is seen in cytosolic IMP-GMP specific 5'-nucleotidase II (cN-II), where the affinity for substrate GMP increases upon GTP binding at the dimer interface. As the two sites are not equivalent, this type of cooperativity is heterotropic.
Negative modulation Negative allosteric modulation (also known as
allosteric inhibition) occurs when the binding of one
ligand decreases the affinity for a ligand at other binding sites. For example, when
2,3-BPG binds to an allosteric site on hemoglobin, the affinity for oxygen of all subunits decreases.
Direct thrombin inhibitors provides an excellent example of negative allosteric modulation.
Allosteric inhibitors of thrombin have been discovered that could potentially be used as anticoagulants. Another example is
strychnine, a
convulsant poison, which acts as an allosteric inhibitor of the
glycine receptor.
Glycine is a major post-
synaptic inhibitory
neurotransmitter in
mammalian
spinal cord and
brain stem. Strychnine acts at a separate binding site on the glycine receptor in an allosteric manner; i.e., its binding lowers the
affinity of the glycine receptor for glycine. Thus, strychnine inhibits the action of an inhibitory transmitter, leading to convulsions. Another instance in which negative allosteric modulation can be seen is between
ATP and the enzyme
phosphofructokinase within the
negative feedback loop that regulates
glycolysis. Phosphofructokinase (generally referred to as
PFK) is an enzyme that catalyses the third step of glycolysis: the
phosphorylation of
fructose-6-phosphate into
fructose 1,6-bisphosphate.
PFK can be allosterically inhibited by high levels of
ATP within the cell. When ATP levels are high, ATP will bind to an allosteric site on
phosphofructokinase, causing a change in the enzyme's three-dimensional shape. This change causes its
affinity for
substrate (
fructose-6-phosphate and
ATP) at the active site to decrease, and the enzyme is deemed inactive. This causes
glycolysis to cease when ATP levels are high, thus conserving the body's
glucose and maintaining balanced levels of cellular ATP. In this way, ATP serves as a negative allosteric modulator for PFK, despite the fact that it is also a substrate of the enzyme. == Types ==