2. Enzymes Flashcards
What are the enzymatic markers for disease? (3)
- Hepatitis
- Myocardial infarction (heart attack)
- Rhabdomyolysis (muscle breakdown)
What is the issue with this liver?
You will see that there is a nice healthy colour and the liver has a regular size. In contrast, in a patient (top half above) with severe hepatitis (hep = liver, itis =
inflammation), there is hepatomegaly (an enlarged liver) and necrosis (cell death). We will explore the enzymes that are released when hepatocytes (liver cells) are damaged.
How does myocardial infarction take place?
In patients who ingest too much cholesterol, atherosclerotic plaques build up inside the capillaries and block blood flow. Cardiomyocytes (cardiac muscle cells) require oxygen and nutrients, meaning that blockage of the capillaries results in failure to deliver adequate oxygen and nutrients to the cells. Cardiac tissue necrosis occurs, and the enzymes that were present inside the cardiomyocytes are released into the blood.
How is the slide indicative of rhabdomyolysis?
However, from a pathological perspective,
the top slide shows a representative field of skeletal muscle that has the requisite mass and cell component. Panel B is a tissue section taken from a patient with skeletal muscle cell lysis. As such, the muscle component is reduced, with more open areas visible on the slide.
Intracellular enzyme localisation:
Extracellular enzyme localisation:
Digestive gastrointestinal enzymes
Blood enzyme localisation:
Mostly diagnosis and prognosis
Digestive enzymes are found in the lumen (and are thus
extracellular) of the gastrointestinal tract. These enzymes are required for the digestion (breakdown) of macromolecules so that the resultant _______ are absorbed into the bloodstream.
monomers
Amino acids or peptides are the monomers (mono = one), which are used to make the _______ (poly = many). If we write down the sequence (order) of the amino acids in the polypeptide, we end up with a primary structure as shown for ________________ as
shown above.
polypeptides
Met-Asp-Leu-Tyr
These polypeptides eventually fold into a 3-dimensional shape, which is called a protein’s _____ structure.
tertiary
In enzymology we are interested in an enzyme’s
tertiary structure because the enzyme’s function depends on the _______ the enzyme folds
into.
shape
In contrast, when you are learning about the gastrointestinal tract, you will be learning
about protein digestion, whereby a protein’s 3-dimensional structure is ________
(destroyed) so that absorption of the amino acids can occur into the bloodstream.
denatured
Broadly speaking, there are two different types of amino acids:
hydrophilic and hydrophobic amino acids
Hydro is the name for water, phil means love and phobia is a dislike of. Thus, hydrophilic amino acids _______ in water, whereas hydrophobic amino
acids do not.
dissolve
As such, the hydrophobic amino acids tend to cluster amongst themselves as shown in green above, whereas the hydrophilic amino acids form ______ ______ with
water and thus dissolve in physiological fluids.
hydrogen bonds
In the diagram above, polar means that
the molecule is charged and so can form hydrogen bonds with water. Therefore the enzyme conformation depends on the ______ ________ of the constituent amino acids.
spatial arrangement
How did the globular shape of enzymes come about?
As a result of the hydrophilicity or hydrophobicity of the enzyme’s amino acids, the enzyme conformation is generally globular (roughly round in shape).
For enzymes it will suffice to know that amino acids interact together via __________ forces, or van der Waals interactions when they form the enzyme
tertiary structure. _______ (S-S) bonds are also important for linking some polypeptide chains in some multi-subunit (_______) enzymes.
ionic/electrostatic forces
Disulphide (S-S)
(allosteric)
What are the types of enzyme structures? (4)
primary (A)
secondary (B)
tertiary (C)
quaternary (D)
What are the characteristics of enzymes? (5)
What conformation do enzymes have?
Enzymes have a conformation that enables them to tightly bind to molecules that match the enzyme binding site. This occurs because enzymes have a groove in their structure that recognises their substrate. The name of the groove is called an active site. Active sites are so specific such that one enzyme only recognises one substrate molecule. This is a desirable feature because we wouldn’t want enzymes to bind a wide range of molecules as we would lose the metabolic control we are trying to achieve.
How do pharmaceutical companies take advantage of the active site?
Pharmaceutical companies take advantage of this fact when they design drugs to inhibit an enzyme active
site, such that there aren’t many side effects as only the enzyme of interest is inhibited by a particular drug.
However, the strength of the binding between the active site and substrate may be strong (have a ____ affinity) or weak (have a ___ affinity).
high
low
Enzymes are biological ______ that speed up reactions.
catalysts
What is anabolism?
What is catabolism?
Anabolism + catabolism =
metabolism
Eating food enables the nutrients to be digested (broken down), absorbed and used to generate adenosine triphosphate (ATP) or energy. This energy is then used to maintain _______ or grow body tissues.
homeostasis
What are the classes of enzymes? (6)
The human body is generally maintained at 37 degrees Celsius, and exposed to 1 atm of atmospheric pressure. Thus high temperatures or high pressures cannot be used to _______ chemical reactions.
accelerate
How do enzymes lower activation energy?
We can visualise enzyme catalysis as the “hill” shown in the figure above. In this case, a reactant Y needs an energy input (b→a) so that product X is formed. High heat and high pressures can be used to enable molecule Y to undergo the change into product X. The energy input (b→a) is also called the reaction activation energy, which is required to convert Y to X. In the body, enzymes lower the activation energy by reducing the reaction activation energy requirement to (b→d). As a result of the enzyme lowering the activation energy, many more Y molecules have enough energy to form product X. The reaction rate is thus greatly enhanced.
How does Catalysis occur?
For a chemical reaction to take place, the reactants must have enough energy to overcome the energy _____ that is required to force the reactants into forming products.
barrier
Explain this diagram.
When the molecules are sluggish and slow, they do not have much kinetic energy (panel A). In this case the molecules have insufficient energy to form products. Thus all the molecules remain as reactants. In panel B the molecules have gained sufficient energy from heat or an increase in pressure such that some molecules have enough energy to form reactants. When the heat
or pressure is increased to such an extent that all molecules have enough energy to overcome the energy barrier (panel C), then all he reactants are converted to products