1.4.2 Enzymes Flashcards
Define the role of an enzyme
Increase the rate of reaction, by lowering the activation energy but are not used up in the process itslef
Can enzymes be used for any reaction
- Enzymes are reaction-specific
- Shape is complimentary to substrates
How does an enzyme increase the rate of reaction
By lowering the activation energy
What is the protein strucutre of an enzyme
- Tertiary
- Globular
- 3D
What does the substrate bind to on an enzyme
The active site
Describe and explain the induced-fit model of enzymes
- Substrate collides and binds to active site
- Enzyme’s shape and active site changes slightly as bonds bend
- Enzyme substrate complex has formed
- Active site becomes complimentary in shape to substrate
- Strains are put on the bonds in the substrate
- Activation energy lowered
- Product released
Describe how increasing the temperture affects an enzyme-controlled reaction, until the point of optinum temperature
- Increasing temperature increases rate of reaction
- Kinetic energy increases
- More successful enzyme-substrate collisons
- More enzyme-substrate complexes formed
Describe how increasing the temperture affects an enzyme-controlled reaction, after the point of optinum temperature
- Above optinum temperature, rate decreases
- Hydrogen bonds broken
- Change in tertiary structure and therefore shape
- Shape of active site no longer complimentary to substrate
- Enzyme has become denatured
Describe how altering the pH affects the rate of an enzyme-controlled reaction
- Change in pH away from optinum causes rate to decrease
- Ionic and hydrogen bonds broken
- Change in tertiary structure and therefore shape
- Shape of active site no longer complimentary to substrate
- Enzyme becomes denatured
- No enzyme-substrate complexes can form
Describe how increasing the substrate concentration affects the rate of an enzyme-controlled reaction
- Increases rate
- More sucsessful enzyme-substrate collisions
- More enzyme-substrate complexes formed
- Maximum rate when all active sites occupied
Describe how increasing the enzyme concentration affects the rate of an enzyme controlled reaction
- Increases rate
- More successful enzyme substrate collisions
- More enzyme-substrate complexes formed
- Maximum rate when all substrates bonded to active sites
Describe competitive inhibitors
- Similar shape to active site
- Binds to active site, blocking it
- Substrate cannot bind
- No ezyme-substrate complexes formed
- Effects reduced by increasing substrate concentration
Describe non-cometitive inhibitation
- Binds to allosteric site (not active site)
- Causes change in tertiary structure and therefore shape of enzyme
- Change in shape of active site
- Active site no longer complimentary to shape of substrate
- Substrate cannot bind
- No enzyme-substrate complexes formed
- Effects NOT reduced by increasing substrate concentration