ISSN:
1522-9602
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
,
Mathematics
Notes:
Abstract Many biochemical reactions consist of the spontaneous fluctuation between two states: A⇌B. For example these two states could be a ligand bound to an enzyme and the ligand and the enzyme separated from each other. A typical case would be the unbinding of CO from myoglobin (Mb), namely, MbCO⇌Mb+CO. Another example is the fluctuation in the ion channel protein in the cell membrane between conformations that are closed to the passage of ions and those that are open to the passage of ions, namely, closed⇌open. Such chemical reactions can be described as two energy levels corresponding to the two states, separated by a distribution of activation energy barriers. Since a kinetic rate can be associated with each energy barrier, this is also equivalent to a distribution of kinetic rate constants. We derive the distribution of the kinetic rates that produces the stretched exponential probability distribution, exp(−at b ) where 0〈b≤1, which has been observed for such reactions. We also derive the form of the cumulative probability distribution when the pathways connecting the states have minimum or maximum rate constants.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02460727
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