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Propensity approach to nonequilibrium thermodynamics of a chemical reaction network: controlling single E-coli β-galactosidase enzyme catalysis through the elementary reaction steps.

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TLDR
This work develops an approach to nonequilibrium thermodynamics of an open chemical reaction network in terms of the elementary reaction propensities, and thoroughly analyzes the temporal as well as the steady state behavior of various thermodynamic quantities for each elementary reaction.
Abstract
In this work, we develop an approach to nonequilibrium thermodynamics of an open chemical reaction network in terms of the elementary reaction propensities. The method is akin to the microscopic formulation of the dissipation function in terms of the Kullback-Leibler distance of phase space trajectories in Hamiltonian system. The formalism is applied to a single oligomeric enzyme kinetics at chemiostatic condition that leads the reaction system to a nonequilibrium steady state, characterized by a positive total entropy production rate. Analytical expressions are derived, relating the individual reaction contributions towards the total entropy production rate with experimentally measurable reaction velocity. Taking a real case of Escherichia coli β-galactosidase enzyme obeying Michaelis-Menten kinetics, we thoroughly analyze the temporal as well as the steady state behavior of various thermodynamic quantities for each elementary reaction. This gives a useful insight in the relative magnitudes of various energy terms and the dissipated heat to sustain a steady state of the reaction system operating far-from-equilibrium. It is also observed that, the reaction is entropy-driven at low substrate concentration and becomes energy-driven as the substrate concentration rises.

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Journal Article

Single Enzyme Pathways and Substrate Fluctuations

TL;DR: A simple theory is developed which predicts that certain classes of enzyme pathways can be distinguished by studying the turnover rate, V, as a function of substrate concentration, [S], and it is found to depend sensitively on the manner in which substrate molecules in the bath are replenished.
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The guiding role of dissipation in kinetic proofreading networks: Implications for protein synthesis

TL;DR: Dissipation plays a guiding role in the optimization of the catalytic rate in the tRNA selection network of protein synthesis, and the network tends to maximize both the EPR and catalytic rates, but not the accuracy.
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Large deviation theory for the kinetics and energetics of turnover of enzyme catalysis in a chemiostatic flow

TL;DR: Using some special properties of the Legendre transformation, here, a relation between the fluctuations of fluxes and dissipation rates is provided, and among them, the fluctuation of the turnover rate is routinely estimated but the fluctuations in the dissipation rate is yet to be characterized for small systems.
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Nonequilibrium thermodynamics and a fluctuation theorem for individual reaction steps in a chemical reaction network

TL;DR: In this paper, an approach to nonequilibrium thermodynamics of an open chemical reaction network in terms of the propensities of individual elementary reactions and corresponding reverse reactions is introduced.
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Entropy production for mechanically or chemically driven biomolecules

TL;DR: In this article, entropy change along a single stochastic trajectory of a biomolecule is discussed for two different sources of non-equilibrium entropy, and the total entropy change obeys an integral fluctuation theorem and a class of further exact relations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Entropic estimate of cooperative binding of substrate on a single oligomeric enzyme: An index of cooperativity

TL;DR: An index of cooperativity, C, defined in terms of the ratio of the surprisals or equivalently, the stochastic system entropy associated with the fully bound state of the cooperative and non-cooperative cases is introduced.
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Effects of bursty protein production on the noisy oscillatory properties of downstream pathways

TL;DR: The results suggest that single cell rhythms can be controlled by regulation of burstiness in protein production and that systems involving autocatalysis, trimerization and genetic feedback loops can be classified.
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Entropic estimate of cooperative binding of substrate on a single oligomeric enzyme: An index of cooperativitya)

Abstract: Here we have systematically studied the cooperative binding of substrate molecules on the active sites of a single oligomeric enzyme in a chemiostatic condition. The average number of bound substrate and the net velocity of the enzyme catalyzed reaction are studied by the formulation of stochastic master equation for the cooperative binding classified here as spatial and temporal. We have estimated the entropy production for the cooperative binding schemes based on single trajectory analysis using a kinetic Monte Carlo technique. It is found that the total as well as the medium entropy production shows the same generic diagnostic signature for detecting the cooperativity, usually characterized in terms of the net velocity of the reaction. This feature is also found to be valid for the total entropy production rate at the non-equilibrium steady state. We have introduced an index of cooperativity, C, defined in terms of the ratio of the surprisals or equivalently, the stochastic system entropy associated with the fully bound state of the cooperative and non-cooperative cases. The criteria of cooperativity in terms of C is compared with that of the Hill coefficient of some relevant experimental result and gives a microscopic insight on the mechanism of cooperative binding of substrate on a single oligomeric enzyme which is usually estimated from the macroscopic reaction rate.
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Master equation approach to single oligomeric enzyme catalysis: Mechanically controlled further catalysis

TL;DR: A master equation description of enzyme catalysis in a chemiostatic condition for an immobilized oligomeric molecule with many equivalent active sites is provided and a Poisson distribution in the nonequilibrium steady state is given.
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Entropy production of a mechanically driven single oligomeric enzyme: a consequence of fluctuation theorem

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors have shown how an applied mechanical force affects an oligomeric enzyme kinetics in a chemiostatic condition where the statistical characteristics of random walk of the substrate molecules over a finite number of active sites of the enzyme plays important contributing factors in governing the overall rate and nonequilibrium thermodynamic properties.
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