5. Enzymes Flashcards
Enzyme definitions
Are biological catalysts that speed up the rate of a chemical reaction without being changed or used up in the reaction. Are also proteins
What is a biological catalyst?
- BIOLOGICAL because they are made in living cells
- CATALYSTS because they speed up the rate of chemical reactions without being changed
Why are enzymes necessary?
Enzymes are necessary to all living organisms as they maintain reaction speeds of all metabolic reactions (all the reactions that keep an organism alive) at a rate that can sustain life
What is special about enzymes?
Enzymes are specific to one particular substrate, as the enzyme is a complementary shape to the substrate
What is a substrate?
molecule/s that get broken down or joined together in the reaction
What causes an enzyme to become specific?
- Enzymes are specific to one particular substrate(s) as the active site of the enzyme, where the substrate attaches, is a complementary shape to the substrate.
- This is because the enzyme is a protein and has a specific 3-D shape
What is enzyme specificity known as?
lock and key hypothesis
What is it called when the substrate moves into the enzyme’s active site?
they become known as the enzyme-substrate complex
What happens after the reaction has occurred?
the products leave the enzyme’s active site as they no longer fit it and it is free to take up another substrate
Describe process of how enzymes work
- Enzymes and substates randomly move about in solution
- When an enzyme and its complementary substrate randomly collide – with the substrate fitting into the active site of the enzyme – an enzyme-substrate complex forms, and the reaction occurs.
- A product (or products) forms from the substrate(s) which are then released from the active site. The enzyme is unchanged and will go on to catalyse further reactions.
What is the enzymes specific shape held in place by?
Enzymes are proteins and have a specific shape, held in place by BONDS
Why is the specific shape important?
This is extremely important around the active site area as the specific shape is what ensures the substrate will fit into the active site and enable the reaction to proceed
When do enzymes work fastest?
Enzymes work fastest at their ‘optimum temperature’ – in the human body, the optimum temperature is 37⁰C
What happens to enzymes when they’re heated to high temperatures?
Heating to high temperatures (beyond the optimum) will break the bonds that hold the enzyme together and it will lose its shape -this is known as denaturation
Why is denaturation such a problem?
Substrates cannot fit into denatured enzymes as the shape of their active site has been lost