Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.118, No.8, 2077-2083, 2014
Surface Dilution Kinetics of Phospholipase A(2) Catalyzed Lipid-Bilayer Hydrolysis
Phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) enzymes catalyze hydrolysis of phospholipids in membranes. Elucidation of the kinetics of interfacial enzymatic activity is best accomplished by investigating the interface substrate concentration dependence of the activity for which appropriate diluents are required. PLA(2) is stereoselective toward the L_enantiomers of phospholipids. A novel approach employing D_phospholipids as diluents to perform surface dilution kinetic studies of PLA(2) is presented. Activity of bee venom PLA(2) at mixed L+D_DPPC (dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine) bilayer interfaces was measured as a function of substrate L_DPPC mole fraction and vesicle concentration using a sensitive fluorescence assay. A model for interface enzymatic activity based on the three-step kinetic scheme of (i) binding of PLA(2) to the bilayer interface, (ii) binding of a lipid to PLA(2) at the interface, and (iii) hydrolysis was applied to the hydrolysis data. Activity profiles showed that D_enantiomers also bind to the enzyme but resist hydrolysis. Activity dependences on vesicle and substrate concentrations could be disentangled, bringing resolution to an outstanding problem in membrane hydrolysis of separating the effects of the three steps. Individual values of the kinetic parameters of the model, including the vesicle-PLA(2) equilibrium dissociation constant of step (i), interface Michaelis-Menten-Henri constant for L and D_DPPC of step (ii), and the rate constant for interface hydrolysis, step (iii), were obtained as solutions to equations resulting from fitting the model to the data.