2.3 Enzyme Kinetics [HY] Flashcards
1
Q
What is factor affecting enzyme kinetics?
A
- environmental conditions
- concentrations of substrate and enzyme
2
Q
What does adding more substrate do?
A
- the rate of the reaction will increase
- as we add more and more, begin to level off and reach a maximal rate of relaxation
3
Q
Saturation
A
- It cannot go any faster once it has reached this point
- the enzyme is working at maximum velocity, denoted by vmax.
- The only way to increase vmax is by increasing the enzyme concentration. Adding more substrate will not increase the rate of reaction.
4
Q
Velocity of the enzyme, Michaelis–Menten equation
A
v = vmax [S] / Km + [S]
5
Q
Km
A
- the substrate concentration at which half of the enzyme’s active sites are full
- intrinsic property
- When the reaction rate is equal to half of vmax, Km = [S]
- Michaelis constant, used to compare enzymes
6
Q
What do low Km and high Km denote?
A
- A low Km reflects a high affinity for the substrate
- a high Km reflects a low affinity of the enzyme for the substrate
7
Q
Relationship between [S] and Km
A
- When [S] < Km then change in [S] changes rxn rate
- When [S] > Km then change in [S] doesn’t have much affect
8
Q
Kcat
A
- # substrate converted to product
9
Q
Vmax
A
- vmax = [E] Kcat
- represents maximum enzyme velocity
- measured in moles of enzyme per second
10
Q
What’s considered catalytically efficient?
A
- Large Kcat, Low Km
- Basically lots of product, and high enzyme affinity
11
Q
Lineweaver–Burk Plots
A
- Actual data is on the right but the left is included to show the x intercept.
- The intercept of the line
with the x-axis gives the value of − 1/Km - The intercept of the line with the y-axis
gives the value of 1/vmax - useful when determining the type of inhibition that an enzyme is experiencing
12
Q
Cooperative enzymes
A
- show sigmoidal (S-shaped) owing to cooperativity among substrate binding sites
- have multiple subunits and multiple active sites
- often regulatory enzymes in
pathways - subject to activation and inhibition, both competitively and through allosteric sites
13
Q
Subunits and enzymes states
A
- a low-affinity tense state (T) or a high-affinity relaxed state (R)
- Binding of the substrate
encourages the transition of other subunits from the T state to the R state. - Increase substrate binding leads to R, and decrease in substrate binding leads to T
14
Q
Hill’s coefficient
A
- Quantifies cooperativity
- The value of Hill’s coefficient indicates the nature of binding by the molecule
- Hc >1 = high affinity after 1st ligand binds
- Hc <1 = low affinity after 1st ligand binds
- Hc = 1 then enzyme doesn’t cooperatively bind