Abstract
If the Michaelis constant of an enzyme-catalysed reaction is independent of pH under conditions where the catalytic constant varies with pH, it is equal to the thermodynamic dissociation constant of the enzyme-substrate complex. This is true for realistic mechanisms in which binding and catalytic steps, are clearly distinguished, as well as for the simpler mechanisms that have been considered previously. It is also true for a mechanism in which a bell-shaped pH profile for the catalytic constant results from a change of rate-limiting step with pH. The relaxation time for ionization of a typical group in unbuffered solutions at 25 degrees C is of the order of 0.1 ms at the longest, and is much shorter in buffered solutions. Thus ionizations in almost all enzyme mechanisms can properly be treated as equilibria, provided that ionization is not accompanied by a slow, compulsory change in conformation.