Chess and enzymes have in common the use of strategy, consciously thought out in the game of chess and selected by evolution for the action of an enzyme. The three amino acid residues at the right, denoted by the white bonds, constitute a catalytic triad found in the active site of a class of enzymes that cleave peptide bonds. The substrate, represented by the molecule with the black bonds, is as hopelessly trapped as the king in the photograph of a chess match at the left and is sure to be cleaved.
[Photograph courtesy of Wendie Berg.]