CH 2 Enzymes Flashcards

1
Q

Oxidoreductases, for what type of reaction, what do they do?

Cofactor?

A

They catalyze oxidation-reduction rxns. The transfer of electron b/w biological molecules.

uses cofactors such as NAD+ and NADP+ that act as e- carriers

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2
Q

Transferases,

what does kinases do?

A

Catalyze the movement of a functional group from one molecule to another

Kinases are a type of transferases that transfers a phosphate group. Usually from ATP to another molecule

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3
Q

Hydrolases what and how do they catalyze?

give some examples:

what is a protease?

A

They catalyze the breaking of a compound into 2 molecules using the addition of water

i. e Phosphatase (protease): cleaves phosphate groups
peptidases: breaks down proteins
nucleases. .
lipases. .

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4
Q

Lyases what do they do

A

they catalyze cleavage of molecules into two products. without the use of water

they can also synthesis one molecules form 2. they are called synthases.

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5
Q

Isomerases what do they catalyze

A

They catalyze the arrangement of bonds within a molecule.

rxns b/w stereoisomers and constitutional isomers

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6
Q

LIgases

A

Catalyze addition or synthesis reactions, b/w larger similar molecules, and often require ATP

i.e in nucleic acid synthesis.

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7
Q

Cofactors and Coenzymes, what are the differences and types?

Fat soluble vitamins?

holoenzyme vs apoenzyme?

Prosthetic groups?

A

they are non-protein molecules that help in the rxns by carrying charge through ionization, protonation, or deprotonation.

Cofactors: inorganic molecules or metal ions, often ingested as dietary minerals.

Coenzymes: organic molecules i.e vitamins or derivatives such as NAD+, FAD, and Coenzyme A.

fat-soluble vitamins: ADEK (A DICK)

Holoenzyme: enzymes that use cofactors

Apoenzymes: enzyme do not use cofactors

Prosthetic groups: enzymes that need cofactors to function

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8
Q

Michaelis-Menten equation?

Km value and affinity

what does Km mean?

A

v= (vmax)([S]) / (Km + [S})

The Michaelis constant (KM) is the substrate concentration when the reaction rate (Velocity moles/sec) is at half of its maximal value (Vmax) (or in other words, it defines the substrate concentration when half of the active sites are occupied)

low Km value = high affinity for the enzyme

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9
Q

pH values in digestive tract?

stomach?

pancreatic enzymes in small intestine?

A

Stomach pH = 2

Pancreatic Enzymes pH = 8.5

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10
Q

Enzymatic irreversible inhibition tables

A

Uncompetitive: binds to allosteric site in enzyme-substrate complex and lock it and prevents its release. Km and Vm are decreased

MIxed: binds to allosteric site in either the enzyme (increased Km) or the enzyme-substrate complex (decrease Km = higher affinity locks it in place) Vm decreases in both cases

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11
Q

Enzymatic reversible inhibition

A
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12
Q

what is Kcat and catalytic efficiency?

A
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