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Normal secondary kinetic isotope

Recognition should be made of the fact that includes both a primary and a secondary kinetic isotope effect, but the latter is usually much smaller than the former and should not contribute greatly to the large difference in activation energies (for normal primary hydrogen kinetic isotope effects, the difference in activation energies is usually around 1 kcal/mol). [Pg.54]

Diagrams showing the origin of normal (A) and inverse (B) secondary kinetic isotope effects. In A the C-H activation energy is smaller, but in B the C-D bond activation energy is smaller. [Pg.430]

State whether the following reactions will show a normal or inverse, primary or secondary, kinetic isotope effect. Explain your reasoning. [Pg.484]

In the following year, Cleland and his coworkers reported further and more emphatic examples of the phenomenon of exaltation of the a-secondary isotope effects in enzymic hydride-transfer reactions. The cases shown in Table 1 for their studies of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and horse-liver alcohol dehydrogenase would have been expected on traditional grounds to show kinetic isotope effects between 1.00 and 1.13 but in fact values of 1.38 and 1.50 were found. Even more impressively, the oxidation of formate by NAD was expected to exhibit an isotope effect between 1.00 and 1/1.13 = 0.89 - an inverse isotope effect because NAD" was being converted to NADH. The observed value was 1.22, normal rather than inverse. Again the model of coupled motion, with a citation to Kurz and Frieden, was invoked to interpret the findings. [Pg.41]

Kinetic complexity definition, 43 Klinman s approach, 46 Kinetic isotope effects, 28 for 2,4,6-collidine, 31 a-secondary, 35 and coupled motion, 35, 40 in enzyme-catalyzed reactions, 35 as indicators of quantum tunneling, 70 in multistep enzymatic reactions, 44-45 normal temperature dependence, 37 Northrop notation, 45 Northrop s method of calculation, 55 rule of geometric mean, 36 secondary effects and transition state, 37 semiclassical treatment for hydrogen transfer,... [Pg.340]


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