Title of article :
Phosphorylation Energy Hypothesis: Open Chemical Systems and Their Biological Functions
Author/Authors :
Qian، Hong نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
30
From page :
113
To page :
142
Abstract :
Biochemical systems and processes in living cells generally operate far from equilibrium. This review presents an overview of a statistical thermodynamic treatment for such systems, with examples from several key components in cellular signal transduction. Open-system nonequilibrium steady-state (NESS) models are introduced. The models account quantitatively for the energetics and thermodynamics in phosphorylation-dephosphorylation switches, GTPase timers, and specificity amplification through kinetic proofreading. The chemical energy derived from ATP and GTP hydrolysis establishes the NESS of a cell and makes the cell—a mesoscopic–biochemical reaction system that consists of a collection of thermally driven fluctuating macromolecules—a genetically programmed chemical machine.
Keywords :
Signal transduction , Thermodynamics , chemical kinetics , kinetic proofreading , nonequilibrium steady state,
Journal title :
Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
Record number :
121292
Link To Document :
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