5. Enzymes Flashcards

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1
Q

Enzyme definitions

A

Are biological catalysts that speed up the rate of a chemical reaction without being changed or used up in the reaction. Are also proteins

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2
Q

What is a biological catalyst?

A
  • BIOLOGICAL because they are made in living cells

- CATALYSTS because they speed up the rate of chemical reactions without being changed

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3
Q

Why are enzymes necessary?

A

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

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4
Q

What is special about enzymes?

A

Enzymes are specific to one particular substrate, as the enzyme is a complementary shape to the substrate

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5
Q

What is a substrate?

A

molecule/s that get broken down or joined together in the reaction

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6
Q

What causes an enzyme to become specific?

A
  • 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
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7
Q

What is enzyme specificity known as?

A

lock and key hypothesis

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8
Q

What is it called when the substrate moves into the enzyme’s active site?

A

they become known as the enzyme-substrate complex

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9
Q

What happens after the reaction has occurred?

A

the products leave the enzyme’s active site as they no longer fit it and it is free to take up another substrate

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10
Q

Describe process of how enzymes work

A
  1. Enzymes and substates randomly move about in solution
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
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11
Q

What is the enzymes specific shape held in place by?

A

Enzymes are proteins and have a specific shape, held in place by BONDS

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12
Q

Why is the specific shape important?

A

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

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13
Q

When do enzymes work fastest?

A

Enzymes work fastest at their ‘optimum temperature’ – in the human body, the optimum temperature is 37⁰C

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14
Q

What happens to enzymes when they’re heated to high temperatures?

A

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

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15
Q

Why is denaturation such a problem?

A

Substrates cannot fit into denatured enzymes as the shape of their active site has been lost

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16
Q

Is denaturation reversible?

A

NO

- Denaturation is irreversible – once enzymes are denatured they cannot regain their proper shape and activity will stop

17
Q

What happens to enzymes when you increase the temperature from 0 degrees to the optimum?

A

Increasing the temperature from 0⁰C to the optimum increases the activity of enzymes as the more energy the molecules have the faster they move and the number of collisions with the substrate molecules increases, leading to a faster rate of reaction

18
Q

What do low temperatures do to enzymes?

A

This means that low temperatures do not denature enzymes, they just make them work more slowly

19
Q

What is the general optimum PH for enzymes? What are some exceptions?

A

The optimum pH for most enzymes is 7

  • some that are produced in acidic conditions, such as the stomach, have a lower optimum pH (pH 2)
  • some that are produced in alkaline conditions, such as the duodenum, have a higher optimum pH (pH 8 or 9)
20
Q

What can happen to enzymes if the pH is too high or too low?

A
  • If the pH is too high or too low, the bonds that hold the amino acid chain together to make up the protein can be destroyed
21
Q

What happens when the conditions move too far away from the optimum pH of the enzyme?

A

Moving too far away from the optimum pH will cause the enzyme to denature and activity will stop

22
Q

What happens to enzyme activity when the conditions move too far away from the optimum pH of the enzyme?

A

This will change the shape of the active site, so the substrate can no longer fit into it, reducing the rate of activity

23
Q

What is an enzymes that digests starch and what is it turned into?

A

Amylase is an enzyme that digests starch (a polysaccharide of glucose) into maltose (a disaccharide of glucose).

24
Q

Describe procedure for Investigating the Effect of Temperature on Amylase

A
  • Starch solution is heated to a set temperature
  • Iodine is added to wells of a spotting tile
  • Amylase is added to the starch solution and mixed well
  • Every minute, droplets of solution are added to a new well of iodine solution
  • This is continued until the iodine stops turning blue-black (this means there is no more starch left in the solution as the amylase has broken it all down)
  • Time taken for the reaction to be completed is recorded
  • Experiment is repeated at different temperatures
  • The quicker the reaction is completed, the faster the enzyme is working
25
Q

Describe procedure for Investigating the Effect of pH on Amylase

A
  • Place single drops of iodine solution in rows on the tile
  • Label a test tube with the pH to be tested
  • Use the syringe to place 2cm3 of amylase in the test tube
  • Add 1cm3 of buffer solution to the test tube using a syringe
  • Use another test tube to add 2cm3 of starch solution to the amylase and buffer solution, start the stopwatch whilst mixing using a pipette
  • After 10 seconds, use a pipette to place one drop of mixture on the first drop of iodine, which should turn blue-black
  • Wait another 10 seconds and place another drop of mixture on the second drop of iodine
  • Repeat every 10 seconds until iodine solution remains orange-brown
  • Repeat experiment at different pH values – the less time the iodine solution takes to remain orange-brown, the quicker all the starch has been digested and so the better the enzyme works at that pH