
In
biochemistry
Biochemistry, or biological chemistry, is the study of chemical processes within and relating to living organisms. A sub-discipline of both chemistry and biology, biochemistry may be divided into three fields: structural biology, enzymology, a ...
, Michaelis–Menten kinetics, named after
Leonor Michaelis
Leonor Michaelis (16 January 1875 – 8 October 1949) was a German biochemist, physical chemist, and physician. He is known for his work with Maud Menten on enzyme kinetics in 1913, as well as for work on enzyme inhibition, pH and quinones.
...
and
Maud Menten
Maud Leonora Menten (March 20, 1879 – July 17, 1960) was a Canadian physician and chemist. As a bio-medical and medical researcher, she made significant contributions to enzyme kinetics and histochemistry, and invented a procedure that rem ...
, is the simplest case of
enzyme kinetics
Enzyme kinetics is the study of the rates of enzyme catalysis, enzyme-catalysed chemical reactions. In enzyme kinetics, the reaction rate is measured and the effects of varying the conditions of the reaction are investigated. Studying an enzyme' ...
, applied to enzyme-catalysed reactions involving the transformation of one substrate into one product. It takes the form of a
differential equation describing the
reaction rate
The reaction rate or rate of reaction is the speed at which a chemical reaction takes place, defined as proportional to the increase in the concentration of a product per unit time and to the decrease in the concentration of a reactant per u ...
(rate of formation of
product P, with concentration
) as a function of
, the
concentration
In chemistry, concentration is the abundance of a constituent divided by the total volume of a mixture. Several types of mathematical description can be distinguished: '' mass concentration'', '' molar concentration'', '' number concentration'', ...
of the
substrate
Substrate may refer to:
Physical layers
*Substrate (biology), the natural environment in which an organism lives, or the surface or medium on which an organism grows or is attached
** Substrate (aquatic environment), the earthy material that exi ...
A (using the symbols recommended by the
IUBMB). Its formula is given by the Michaelis–Menten equation:
:
, which is often written as
, represents the limiting rate approached by the system at saturating substrate concentration for a given enzyme concentration. The Michaelis constant
has units of concentration, and for a given reaction is equal to the concentration of substrate at which the reaction rate is half of
.
[ Biochemical reactions involving a single substrate are often assumed to follow Michaelis–Menten kinetics, without regard to the model's underlying assumptions. Only a small proportion of enzyme-catalysed reactions have just one substrate, but the equation still often applies if only one substrate concentration is varied.
]
"Michaelis–Menten plot"
The plot of against has often been called a "Michaelis–Menten plot", even recently, but this is misleading, because Michaelis and Menten did not use such a plot. Instead, they plotted against , which has some advantages over the usual ways of plotting Michaelis–Menten data. It has as the dependent variable, and thus does not distort the experimental errors in . Michaelis and Menten did not attempt to estimate directly from the limit approached at high , something difficult to do accurately with data obtained with modern techniques, and almost impossible with their data. Instead they took advantage of the fact that the curve is almost straight in the middle range and has a maximum slope of i.e. . With an accurate value of it was easy to determine from the point on the curve corresponding to .
This plot is virtually never used today for estimating and , but it remains of major interest because it has another valuable property: it allows the properties of isoenzymes catalysing the same reaction, but active in very different ranges of substrate concentration, to be compared on a single plot. For example, the four mammalian isoenzymes of hexokinase
A hexokinase is an enzyme that irreversibly phosphorylates hexoses (six-carbon sugars), forming hexose phosphate. In most organisms, glucose is the most important substrate for hexokinases, and glucose-6-phosphate is the most important p ...
are half-saturated by glucose at concentrations ranging from about 0.02 mM for hexokinase A (brain hexokinase) to about 50 mM for hexokinase D ("glucokinase", liver hexokinase), more than a 2000-fold range. It would be impossible to show a kinetic comparison between the four isoenzymes on one of the usual plots, but it is easily done on a semi-logarithmic plot.
Model
A decade before Michaelis and Menten, Victor Henri found that enzyme reactions could be explained by assuming a binding interaction between the enzyme and the substrate. His work was taken up by Michaelis and Menten, who investigated the kinetics of invertase
β-Fructofuranosidase is an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis (breakdown) of the table sugar sucrose into fructose and glucose. Sucrose is a fructoside. Alternative names for β-fructofuranosidase include invertase, saccharase, glucosucrase ...
, an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis
Hydrolysis (; ) is any chemical reaction in which a molecule of water breaks one or more chemical bonds. The term is used broadly for substitution reaction, substitution, elimination reaction, elimination, and solvation reactions in which water ...
of sucrose
Sucrose, a disaccharide, is a sugar composed of glucose and fructose subunits. It is produced naturally in plants and is the main constituent of white sugar. It has the molecular formula .
For human consumption, sucrose is extracted and refined ...
into glucose
Glucose is a sugar with the Chemical formula#Molecular formula, molecular formula , which is often abbreviated as Glc. It is overall the most abundant monosaccharide, a subcategory of carbohydrates. It is mainly made by plants and most algae d ...
and fructose
Fructose (), or fruit sugar, is a Ketose, ketonic monosaccharide, simple sugar found in many plants, where it is often bonded to glucose to form the disaccharide sucrose. It is one of the three dietary monosaccharides, along with glucose and gal ...
. In 1913 they proposed a mathematical model of the reaction. It involves an enzyme
An enzyme () is a protein that acts as a biological catalyst by accelerating chemical reactions. The molecules upon which enzymes may act are called substrate (chemistry), substrates, and the enzyme converts the substrates into different mol ...
E binding to a substrate A to form a complex
Complex commonly refers to:
* Complexity, the behaviour of a system whose components interact in multiple ways so possible interactions are difficult to describe
** Complex system, a system composed of many components which may interact with each ...
EA that releases a product P regenerating the original form of the enzyme. This may be represented schematically as
:E + A <=> mathit\mathit] EA -> _\ceE + P
where (forward rate constant), (reverse rate constant), and (catalytic rate constant) denote the rate constants, the double arrows between A (substrate) and EA (enzyme-substrate complex) represent the fact that enzyme-substrate binding is a reversible process, and the single forward arrow represents the formation of P (product).
Under certain assumptions – such as the enzyme concentration being much less than the substrate concentration – the rate of product formation is given by
:
in which is the initial enzyme concentration. The reaction order depends on the relative size of the two terms in the denominator. At low substrate concentration , so that the rate varies linearly with substrate concentration ( first-order kinetics in ).[ Laidler K.J. and Meiser J.H. ''Physical Chemistry'' (Benjamin/Cummings 1982) p.430 ] However at higher , with , the reaction approaches independence of (zero-order kinetics in ),[ ]asymptotically
In analytic geometry, an asymptote () of a curve is a line such that the distance between the curve and the line approaches zero as one or both of the ''x'' or ''y'' coordinates tends to infinity. In projective geometry and related contexts, ...
approaching the limiting rate . This rate, which is never attained, refers to the hypothetical case in which all enzyme molecules are bound to substrate. , known as the turnover number
In chemistry, the term "turnover number" has two distinct meanings.
In enzymology, the turnover number () is defined as the limiting number of chemical conversions of substrate molecules per second that a single active site will execute for a g ...
or catalytic constant, normally expressed in s –1, is the limiting number of substrate molecules converted to product per enzyme molecule per unit of time. Further addition of substrate would not increase the rate, and the enzyme is said to be saturated.
The Michaelis constant is not affected by the concentration or purity of an enzyme. Its value depends both on the identity of the enzyme and that of the substrate, as well as conditions such as temperature and pH.
The model is used in a variety of biochemical situations other than enzyme-substrate interaction, including antigen–antibody binding, DNA–DNA hybridization
In genomics, DNA–DNA hybridization is a molecular biology technique that measures the degree of genetic similarity between DNA sequences. It is used to determine the genetic distance between two organisms and has been used extensively in phylo ...
, and protein–protein interaction
Protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are physical contacts of high specificity established between two or more protein molecules as a result of biochemical events steered by interactions that include electrostatic forces, hydrogen bonding and t ...
. It can be used to characterize a generic biochemical reaction, in the same way that the Langmuir equation
Langmuir may refer to:
* Langmuir (crater), an impact crater on the Moon's far side
* Langmuir (journal), ''Langmuir'' (journal), an academic journal on colloids, surfaces and interfaces, published by the American Chemical Society
* Langmuir (unit ...
can be used to model generic adsorption
Adsorption is the adhesion of atoms, ions or molecules from a gas, liquid or dissolved solid to a surface. This process creates a film of the ''adsorbate'' on the surface of the ''adsorbent''. This process differs from absorption, in which a ...
of biomolecular species. When an empirical equation of this form is applied to microbial growth, it is sometimes called a Monod equation.
Michaelis–Menten kinetics have also been applied to a variety of topics outside of biochemical reactions, including alveolar clearance of dusts, the richness of species pools, clearance of blood alcohol, the photosynthesis-irradiance relationship, and bacterial phage
A bacteriophage (), also known informally as a phage (), is a virus that infects and replicates within bacteria. The term is derived . Bacteriophages are composed of proteins that encapsulate a DNA or RNA genome, and may have structures tha ...
infection.
The equation can also be used to describe the relationship between ion channel
Ion channels are pore-forming membrane proteins that allow ions to pass through the channel pore. Their functions include establishing a resting membrane potential, shaping action potentials and other electrical signals by Gating (electrophysiol ...
conductivity and ligand
In coordination chemistry, a ligand is an ion or molecule with a functional group that binds to a central metal atom to form a coordination complex. The bonding with the metal generally involves formal donation of one or more of the ligand's el ...
concentration, and also, for example, to limiting nutrients and phytoplankton growth in the global ocean.
Specificity
The specificity constant
In the field of biochemistry, the specificity constant (also called kinetic efficiency or k_/K_), is a measure of how efficiently an enzyme converts substrates into products. A comparison of specificity constants can also be used as a measure of t ...
(also known as the ''catalytic efficiency'') is a measure of how efficiently an enzyme converts a substrate into product. Although it is the ratio of and it is a parameter in its own right, more fundamental than . Diffusion limited enzyme
A diffusion-limited enzyme catalyses a reaction so efficiently that the rate limiting step is that of substrate diffusion into the active site, or product diffusion out. This is also known as kinetic perfection or catalytic perfection. Since ...
s, such as fumarase
Fumarase (or fumarate hydratase) is an enzyme () that catalyzes the reversible Hydration reaction, hydration/Dehydration reaction, dehydration of fumarate to malate. Fumarase comes in two forms: mitochondrial and cytosolic. The mitochondrial iso ...
, work at the theoretical upper limit of , limited by diffusion of substrate into the active site
In biology and biochemistry, the active site is the region of an enzyme where substrate molecules bind and undergo a chemical reaction. The active site consists of amino acid residues that form temporary bonds with the substrate, the ''binding s ...
.
If we symbolize the specificity constant for a particular substrate A as the Michaelis–Menten equation can be written in terms of and as follows:
:
At small values of the substrate concentration this approximates to a first-order dependence of the rate on the substrate concentration:
:
Conversely it approaches a zero-order dependence on when the substrate concentration is high:
:
The capacity of an enzyme to distinguish between two competing substrates that both follow Michaelis–Menten kinetics depends only on the specificity constant, and not on either or alone. Putting for substrate and for a competing substrate , then the two rates when both are present simultaneously are as follows:
:
Although both denominators contain the Michaelis constants they are the same, and thus cancel when one equation is divided by the other:
:
and so the ratio of rates depends only on the concentrations of the two substrates and their specificity constants.
Nomenclature
As the equation originated with Henri, not with Michaelis and Menten, it is more accurate to call it the Henri–Michaelis–Menten equation, though it was Michaelis and Menten who realized that analysing reactions in terms of initial rates would be simpler, and as a result more productive, than analysing the time course of reaction, as Henri had attempted. Although Henri derived the equation he made no attempt to apply it. In addition, Michaelis and Menten understood the need for buffers to control the pH, but Henri did not.
Applications
Parameter values vary widely between enzymes. Some examples are as follows:
Derivation
Equilibrium approximation
In their analysis, Michaelis and Menten (and also Henri) assumed that the substrate is in instantaneous chemical equilibrium
In a chemical reaction, chemical equilibrium is the state in which both the Reagent, reactants and Product (chemistry), products are present in concentrations which have no further tendency to change with time, so that there is no observable chan ...
with the complex, which implies
:
in which ''e'' is the concentration of free enzyme (not the total concentration) and ''x'' is the concentration of enzyme-substrate complex EA.
Conservation of enzyme requires that
:
where is now the total enzyme concentration. After combining the two expressions some straightforward algebra leads to the following expression for the concentration of the enzyme-substrate complex:
:
where is the dissociation constant
In chemistry, biochemistry, and pharmacology, a dissociation constant (''K''D) is a specific type of equilibrium constant that measures the propensity of a larger object to separate (dissociate) reversibly into smaller components, as when a complex ...
of the enzyme-substrate complex. Hence the rate equation is the Michaelis–Menten equation,
:
where corresponds to the catalytic constant and the limiting rate is . Likewise with the assumption of equilibrium the Michaelis constant .
Irreversible first step
When studying urease
Ureases (), functionally, belong to the superfamily of amidohydrolases and phosphotriesterases. Ureases are found in numerous Bacteria, Archaea, fungi, algae, plants, and some invertebrates. Ureases are nickel-containing metalloenzymes of high ...
at about the same time as Michaelis and Menten were studying invertase, Donald Van Slyke and G. E. Cullen made essentially the opposite assumption, treating the first step not as an equilibrium but as an irreversible second-order reaction with rate constant . As their approach is never used today it is sufficient to give their final rate equation:
:
and to note that it is functionally indistinguishable from the Henri–Michaelis–Menten equation. One cannot tell from inspection of the kinetic behaviour whether is equal to or to or to something else.
Steady-state approximation
G. E. Briggs and J. B. S. Haldane undertook an analysis that harmonized the approaches of Michaelis and Menten and of Van Slyke and Cullen, and is taken as the basic approach to enzyme kinetics today. They assumed that the concentration of the intermediate complex does not change on the time scale over which product formation is measured. This assumption means that . The resulting rate equation is as follows:
:
where
:
This is the generalized definition of the Michaelis constant.
Assumptions and limitations
All of the derivations given treat the initial binding step in terms of the law of mass action
In chemistry, the law of mass action is the proposition that the rate of a chemical reaction is directly proportional to the product of the activities or concentrations of the reactants. It explains and predicts behaviors of solutions in dy ...
, which assumes free diffusion
Diffusion is the net movement of anything (for example, atoms, ions, molecules, energy) generally from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration. Diffusion is driven by a gradient in Gibbs free energy or chemical p ...
through the solution. However, in the environment of a living cell where there is a high concentration of protein
Proteins are large biomolecules and macromolecules that comprise one or more long chains of amino acid residue (biochemistry), residues. Proteins perform a vast array of functions within organisms, including Enzyme catalysis, catalysing metab ...
s, the cytoplasm
The cytoplasm describes all the material within a eukaryotic or prokaryotic cell, enclosed by the cell membrane, including the organelles and excluding the nucleus in eukaryotic cells. The material inside the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell a ...
often behaves more like a viscous gel than a free-flowing liquid, limiting molecular movements by diffusion
Diffusion is the net movement of anything (for example, atoms, ions, molecules, energy) generally from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration. Diffusion is driven by a gradient in Gibbs free energy or chemical p ...
and altering reaction rates. Note, however that although this gel-like structure severely restricts large molecules like proteins its effect on small molecules, like many of the metabolites that participate in central metabolism, is very much smaller. In practice, therefore, treating the movement of substrates in terms of diffusion is not likely to produce major errors. Nonetheless, Schnell and Turner consider it more appropriate to model the cytoplasm as a fractal
In mathematics, a fractal is a Shape, geometric shape containing detailed structure at arbitrarily small scales, usually having a fractal dimension strictly exceeding the topological dimension. Many fractals appear similar at various scale ...
, in order to capture its limited-mobility kinetics.
Estimation of Michaelis–Menten parameters
Graphical methods
Determining the parameters of the Michaelis–Menten equation typically involves running a series of enzyme assay
Enzyme assays are laboratory methods for measuring enzymatic activity. They are vital for the study of enzyme kinetics and enzyme inhibition.
Enzyme units
The quantity or concentration of an enzyme can be expressed in molar amounts, as with a ...
s at varying substrate concentrations , and measuring the initial reaction rates , i.e. the reaction rates are measured after a time period short enough for it to be assumed that the enzyme-substrate complex has formed, but that the substrate concentration remains almost constant, and so the equilibrium or quasi-steady-state approximation remain valid. By plotting reaction rate against concentration, and using nonlinear regression
In statistics, nonlinear regression is a form of regression analysis in which observational data are modeled by a function which is a nonlinear combination of the model parameters and depends on one or more independent variables. The data are fi ...
of the Michaelis–Menten equation with correct weighting based on known error distribution properties of the rates, the parameters may be obtained.
Before computing facilities to perform nonlinear regression became available, graphical methods involving linearisation of the equation were used. A number of these were proposed, including the Eadie–Hofstee plot of against , the Hanes plot of against , and the Lineweaver–Burk plot (also known as the double-reciprocal plot) of against . Of these, the Hanes plot is the most accurate when is subject to errors with uniform standard deviation. From the point of view of visualizaing the data the Eadie–Hofstee plot has an important property: the entire possible range of values from to occupies a finite range of ordinate scale, making it impossible to choose axes that conceal a poor experimental design.
However, while useful for visualization, all three linear plots distort the error structure of the data and provide less precise estimates of and than correctly weighted non-linear regression. Assuming an error on , an inverse representation leads to an error of on (Propagation of uncertainty
In statistics, propagation of uncertainty (or propagation of error) is the effect of variables' uncertainties (or errors, more specifically random errors) on the uncertainty of a function based on them. When the variables are the values of ex ...
), implying that linear regression of the double-reciprocal plot should include weights of . This was well understood by Lineweaver and Burk, who had consulted the eminent statistician W. Edwards Deming
William Edwards Deming (October 14, 1900 – December 20, 1993) was an American business theorist, composer, economist, industrial engineer, management consultant, statistician, and writer. Educated initially as an electrical engineer and later ...
before analysing their data. Unlike nearly all workers since, Burk made an experimental study of the error distribution, finding it consistent with a uniform standard error in , before deciding on the appropriate weights. This aspect of the work of Lineweaver and Burk received virtually no attention at the time, and was subsequently forgotten.
The direct linear plot
In biochemistry, the direct linear plot is a graphical method for enzyme kinetics data following the Michaelis–Menten equation. In this plot, observations are not plotted as points, but as ''lines'' in parameter space with axes K_\mathrm and V, ...
is a graphical method in which the observations are represented by straight lines in parameter space, with axes and : each line is drawn with an intercept of on the axis and on the axis. The point of intersection of the lines for different observations yields the values of and .
Weighting
Many authors, for example Greco and Hakala, have claimed that non-linear regression is always superior to regression of the linear forms of the Michaelis–Menten equation. However, that is correct only if the appropriate weighting scheme is used, preferably on the basis of experimental investigation, something that is almost never done. As noted above, Burk carried out the appropriate investigation, and found that the error structure of his data was consistent with a uniform standard deviation in . More recent studies found that a uniform coefficient of variation (standard deviation expressed as a percentage) was closer to the truth with the techniques in use in the 1970s. However, this truth may be more complicated than any dependence on alone can represent.
Uniform standard deviation of . If the rates are considered to have a uniform standard deviation the appropriate weight for every value for non-linear regression is 1. If the double-reciprocal plot is used each value of should have a weight of , whereas if the Hanes plot is used each value of should have a weight of .
Uniform coefficient variation of . If the rates are considered to have a uniform coefficient variation the appropriate weight for every value for non-linear regression is . If the double-reciprocal plot is used each value of should have a weight of , whereas if the Hanes plot is used each value of should have a weight of .
Ideally the in each of these cases should be the true value, but that is always unknown. However, after a preliminary estimation one can use the calculated values for refining the estimation. In practice the error structure of enzyme kinetic data is very rarely investigated experimentally, therefore almost never known, but simply assumed. It is, however, possible to form an impression of the error structure from internal evidence in the data. This is tedious to do by hand, but can readily be done in the computer.
Closed form equation
Santiago Schnell and Claudio Mendoza suggested a closed form solution for the time course kinetics analysis of the Michaelis–Menten kinetics based on the solution of the Lambert W function
In mathematics, the Lambert function, also called the omega function or product logarithm, is a multivalued function, namely the Branch point, branches of the converse relation of the function , where is any complex number and is the expone ...
.
Namely,
:
where ''W'' is the Lambert W function and
:
The above equation, known nowadays as the Schnell-Mendoza equation, has been used to estimate and from time course data.
Reactions with more than one substrate
Only a small minority of enzyme-catalysed reactions have just one substrate, and even if the number is increased by treating two-substrate reactions in which one substrate is water as one-substrate reactions the number is still small. One might accordingly suppose that the Michaelis–Menten equation, normally written with just one substrate, is of limited usefulness. This supposition is misleading, however. One of the common equations for a two-substrate reaction can be written as follows to express in terms of two substrate concentrations and :
:
the other symbols represent kinetic constants. Suppose now that is varied with held constant. Then it is convenient to reorganize the equation as follows:
:
This has exactly the form of the Michaelis–Menten equation
:
with apparent values and defined as follows:
:
:
Linear inhibition
The linear (simple) types of inhibition can be classified in terms of the general equation for mixed inhibition at an inhibitor concentration :
:
in which is the competitive inhibition constant and is the uncompetitive inhibition constant. This equation includes the other types of inhibition as special cases:
* If the second parenthesis in the denominator approaches and the resulting behaviour is competitive inhibition.
* If the first parenthesis in the denominator approaches and the resulting behaviour is uncompetitive inhibition.
* If both and are finite the behaviour is mixed inhibition.
* If the resulting special case is pure non-competitive inhibition.
Pure non-competitive inhibition is very rare, being mainly confined to effects of protons and some metal ions. Cleland recognized this, and he redefined ''noncompetitive'' to mean ''mixed''. Some authors have followed him in this respect, but not all, so when reading any publication one needs to check what definition the authors are using.
In all cases the kinetic equations have the form of the Michaelis–Menten equation with apparent constants, as can be seen by writing the equation above as follows:
:
with apparent values and defined as follows:
:
:
See also
* Direct linear plot
In biochemistry, the direct linear plot is a graphical method for enzyme kinetics data following the Michaelis–Menten equation. In this plot, observations are not plotted as points, but as ''lines'' in parameter space with axes K_\mathrm and V, ...
* Eadie–Hofstee plot
* Enzyme kinetics
Enzyme kinetics is the study of the rates of enzyme catalysis, enzyme-catalysed chemical reactions. In enzyme kinetics, the reaction rate is measured and the effects of varying the conditions of the reaction are investigated. Studying an enzyme' ...
* Functional response
A functional response in ecology is the intake rate of a consumer as a function of food density (the amount of food available in a given ecotope). It is associated with the numerical response, which is the reproduction rate of a consumer as a fu ...
(ecology)
* Gompertz function
* Hanes plot
* Hill equation
* Hill contribution to Langmuir equation
* Langmuir adsorption model
The Langmuir adsorption model explains adsorption by assuming an adsorbate behaves as an ideal gas at isothermal conditions. According to the model, adsorption and desorption are reversible processes. This model even explains the effect of pressu ...
(equation with the same mathematical form)
* Lineweaver–Burk plot
* Monod equation (equation with the same mathematical form)
* Reaction progress kinetic analysis
In chemistry, reaction progress kinetic analysis (RPKA) is a subset of a broad range of chemical kinetics, kinetic techniques utilized to determine the rate laws of chemical reactions and to aid in elucidation of reaction mechanisms. While the conc ...
* Reversible Michaelis–Menten kinetics
Enzymes are protein
Proteins are large biomolecules and macromolecules that comprise one or more long chains of amino acid residue (biochemistry), residues. Proteins perform a vast array of functions within organisms, including Enzyme cataly ...
* Steady state
In systems theory, a system or a process is in a steady state if the variables (called state variables) which define the behavior of the system or the process are unchanging in time. In continuous time, this means that for those properties ''p' ...
* Victor Henri, who first wrote the general equation form in 1901
* Von Bertalanffy function
References
External links
Online Vmax calculator
(ic50.tk/kmvmax.html) based on the C programming language
C (''pronounced'' '' – like the letter c'') is a general-purpose programming language. It was created in the 1970s by Dennis Ritchie and remains very widely used and influential. By design, C's features cleanly reflect the capabilities of ...
and the non-linear least-squares Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm
In mathematics and computing, the Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm (LMA or just LM), also known as the damped least-squares (DLS) method, is used to solve non-linear least squares problems. These minimization problems arise especially in least s ...
of gnuplot
Alternative online calculator
(ic50.org/kmvmax.html) based on Python, NumPy
NumPy (pronounced ) is a library for the Python programming language, adding support for large, multi-dimensional arrays and matrices, along with a large collection of high-level mathematical functions to operate on these arrays. The predeces ...
, Matplotlib
Matplotlib (portmanteau of MATLAB, plot, and library) is a Plotter, plotting Library (computer science), library for the Python (programming language), Python programming language and its Numerical analysis, numerical mathematics extension NumPy. ...
and the non-linear least-squares Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm
In mathematics and computing, the Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm (LMA or just LM), also known as the damped least-squares (DLS) method, is used to solve non-linear least squares problems. These minimization problems arise especially in least s ...
of SciPy
SciPy (pronounced "sigh pie") is a free and open-source Python library used for scientific computing and technical computing.
SciPy contains modules for optimization, linear algebra, integration, interpolation, special functions, fast Fourier ...
Further reading
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
Enzyme kinetics
Chemical kinetics
Ordinary differential equations
Catalysis