4.3 Enzyme inhibitors Flashcards

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1
Q

What is an inhibitor?

A

molecules that prevent enzymes from carrying out their normal function of catalysis
–> two types of enzyme inhibition: competitive vs non-competitive

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2
Q

Competitive inhibition

A

A molecule/ part of molecule that has a similar shape to the substrate of an enzyme can fit into active site of enzyme
–> blocking the substrate from entering active site and preventing the enzyme from catalysing the reaction
–> Enzyme cannot carry out its function (inhibited)

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3
Q

Competitive inhibitors

A

Substrate and inhibitor molecules present will compete with each other to bind to the active site of the enzyme
–> reduces no of substrate molecules binding to active sites in a given time (slows down rate of reaction)
–> thus name (actively competing to bind to active site)

Most only bind temporarily to active site (reversible)

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4
Q

Effect of competitive inhibitors on rate of reaction

A
  • Reduces rate of reaction for given conc of substrate
  • no change to V max

However, if substrate conc is increased enough, much more substrate than inhibitor, allowing Vmax to be reached

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5
Q

Examples of competitive inhibition

A

statins are competitive inhibitors of an enzyme used to synthesis cholesterol
–< helps reduce blood cholesterol conc.

Aspirin irreversibly inhibits active site of COX enzymes
–> prevents synthesis of prostaglandins and thromboxane (chemicals that produce pain and fever)

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6
Q

Non-competitive inhibition

A

Inhibitor binds to enzyme at a location other than active site (allosteric site), causing a change in the tertiary structure of the enzyme.
–> changes active site so no longer a complementary shape to substrate
–> substrate can no longer bind to enzyme= enzyme cannot carry out function

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7
Q

Non-competitive inhibitor

A
  • does not actively compete with substrate for active site
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8
Q

Effect of non-competitive inhibitors on rate of reaction

A

Increasing conc of enzyme/substrate will not overcome effect of inhibitor

–> Increased conc of inhibitor= lower rate of reaction= lower Vmax

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9
Q

Examples of non-competitive inhibitors

A

binding can be reversible/ non-reversible
–> irreversible cannot be removed: often toxic

e.g Organophosphates used insecticides and herbicides irreversibly inhibit enzyme acetyl cholinesterase (used for nerve impulse transmission).
–> can lead to muscle cramps, paralysis & even death

Proton pump inhibitors can irreversibly block an enzyme system for secreting H+ ions into stomach
–> effective in reducing production of excess acid which could lead to stomach ulcers

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10
Q

End product inhibition

A

The product of a reaction will act as an inhibitor to the enzyme that produces it (negative feedback mechanism to ensure excess is not made

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11
Q

How does respiration use end product inhibition

A

Respiration= metabolic pathway in producing ATP. Glucose is broken down in multiple steps:
1. addition of two phosphate gorups to glucose ( second phosphate group is catalysed by enzyme phosphofructokinase PFK(inhibited by ATP)

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12
Q

Negative feed back when ATP levels are too high?

A

High ATP= more ATP binds to allosteric site on PFK
–> prevents addition of second phosphate group to glucose
–> glucose is not broken down and ATP is not produced at same rate

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13
Q

Negative feed back when ATP levels are too low?

A

Low ATP= less binding to PFK
–> enzyme can catalyse addition of second phosphate group to glucose
–> respiration resumes= production of more ATP

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