C1.1 - ENZYMES & METABOLISM Flashcards
Outline the function and benefit of enzymes as a catalyst
- Enzymes ARE catalysts
- Speed up chemical reactions, and increase reaction rates
- Are reusable/recycled
- Specific enzymes bind to specific substrates
- Typically proteins (some RNA too)
BENEFITS:
1. Products can be produced when needed (when substrate binds to the enzyme)
2 Reaction can occur at body temperature
3. Occur at low concentrations of the substrate or the enzyme
Outline metabolism
METABOLISM: the sum of all enzyme-catalysed reactions within the cell/organism and the complete network of interdependent and interactive chemical reactions occurring in living organisms
- Involves anabolism (synthesis of macromolecules from monomers) via condensation reactions, and catabolic reactions (digestion of macromolecules) via hydrolysis reactions
- Involves a SERIES of enzyme-controlled reactions: product of one reaction is the substrate of the next, has chains/cycles
- Enzyme-specific molecules bind to specific substrates
Outline the role of enzymes in metabolism
- Chemical reactions occurs in the presence of SPECIFIC ENZYMES
- Enzymes can be reused/recycled
- Living organisms require many different enzymes
- Enzymes control the rate of metabolic reactions
- Systems result in emergent properties at each level of biological organisation (cell - tissue-organ - system)
Describe some example of catabolic and anabolic reactions
CATABOLIC REACTIONS:
DIGESTION:
1. Starch ( to glucose monomers amylase)
2. Lipids (glycerol + fatty acid via lipase)
3. Proteins (amino acid monomers via protease)
3. CELL RESPIRATION: Glucose broken down into Co2
ANABOLIC REACTIONS:
1. Photosynthesis: glucose monomers (sucrose) into starch
2. Protein synthesis: amino acid monomers join to form peptides/polypeptides
3. Glycogen: glucose monomers join to form glycogen
Outline the structure and function of enzymes/active sites for catalysis
CATALYSIS: the process of adding a catalyst to facilitate a reaction.
- Enzymes are globular proteins with an active site for catalysis
- Substrates bind to the enzyme his active site, and it is complementary in shape – lock and key model (NOT THE SAMME SHAPE)
- Eynzymes form enzyme-substrate complexes (ES)
- Bonds in the substrate are weekend, or substrates are orientated to form bonds
- Enzymes lower the activation energy
ACTIVE SITE:
1. location on the surface of the enzyme
2. Composed of amino acids
Describe the interactions between the substrate and active site that allows for induced fit binding
- Active site (and the substrate) can change shapes slightly
- Allows active site/enzyme to bind to similarly shaped substrates
- Catalyses a type or category of reaction
- Polar regions attract the substrates, leading to a chemical reaction
- When substrate binds to active site, it creates an enzyme-substrate complex (binding weaken/break bonds OR orient bonds/substrates to allow bonds to form)
Outline the lock and key model
- Specificity of active site
- Complementary shapes
- Substrate binds to active site
Explain the role of molecular motion and collisions between substrates and active sites in enzyme catalysis
- Molecules (substrates and enzymes) are dissolved in water (cytoplasm, blood, extra/intracellular fluid)
- They have random movement and kinetic energy
- Collision: substrate hits the active site at any angle, but ONLY CORRECT allows for binding to occur
- This allows for enzyme-substrate complexes to form
- Enzymes can be immobilised (stuck and attached to a surface) -> embedded in membranes like chloroplast/mitochondria, or in glass beads/entrapped in gel particles (lactose free milk)
Outline the benefits of immobilised enzymes
Immobilized enzymes are enzymes that are attached to another surface or entraped in gels
- Concentrations of the substrate or enzvme
- Recycle the use of the enzyme
- Separation of the enzvme from the product
4.Stability of the enzyme sensitive to temperature / pH changes
Explain the relationship between the structure of the active site, enzyme-substrate specificity, and denaturation
- Active sites are 3D, on the surface of enzyme, consists of a few amino acids
- Active sites are complementary in shape to substrate – binds to specific substrates
- Substrates bind to active site and from the enzyme-substrat complex: chemical interaction as polar regions of AS are attracted to substrate
- Denaturation is the change of shape of the active site ->changes h-bonding/ionic bonds/R-group interactions of active site -> enzyme and substrate can’t bind and from ES complexes
- Denaturation is caused by a change (increase/decrease) in pH from optimal pH, or when temperatures are above the optimal
Outline the effect of temperatures on enzymes
1) @ LOW TEMPERATURES
1. Low enzyme activity
2. Low molecular motion
3. Low kinetic energy
4. Low collisions between active site/substrate
2) As temperatures increase, enzyme activity, molecular motion, kinetic energy, and collisions increase
3) Each enzymes have an optimal temperature – where reaction rate is at the highest
4) Temperatures above/below optimal decreases rate of reaction
5) Denaturation occurs when temperature is too high:
- R-group tertiary structure/ hydrogen/ionic bonds are broken
- changes 3-d shape of protein and active site
- substrate can’t bind
- rate decreases
- enzyme-substrate complex can’t form
!interpret graphs, reference collision theory and denaturation!
Outline the effect of pH on enzymes
- Enzymes have an optimal pH (2 for stomach, and 7-8 for intestinal)
- Above and below optimal pH lower enzyme activity, and can denature enzyme
- Denatured enzymes change the shape of active site or tertiary structure
- Hydrogen/ionic bonds are altered
- Substrate can’t bind to active site, and substrate-enzyme complex can’t form, lowered reaction
H+ is acidic, low pH
OH- basic, high pH
Neutral is 7
Outline the effect of substrate concentration of the rate
- As you increase substrate concentration, increase collisions, increase the rate of substrate enzyme binding, formation of complexes, increase enzyme activity
- At high substrate concentrations, enzyme activity plateaus. Further increase will not increase the enzyme activity any further
Outline the effect of increasing substrate concentration of competitive/non-competitive inhibitors
INCREASE OF COMPETITIVE INHIBITORS: Increases enzyme activity, greater probability active site will collide with substrate
INCREASE OF NON-COMPETITIVE INHIBITORS: Does not increase enzyme activity, no more enzymes available
Distinguish between intracellular and extracellular enzyme-catalysed reactions
INTRACELLULAR - within the cell:
1. Enzymes are in cytoplasm, embedded in membranes, inside organelles
2. Some enzymes (catalytic proteins) are produced for use within the cell/intracellular enzymes
3. Ex: Cell respiration, photosynthesis
EXTRACELLULAR - outside of the cell
1. Enzymes are transported out of the cell
2. They are exported via vesicles through exocytosis
3. Ex: chemical digestion in gut, mouth, and stomach