Enzyme Activity Flashcards
What is a chemical reaction?
The conversion of a substrate to a product and vice-versa by making/breaking bonds.
What is meant by the term transition state?
High energy intermediate that lies between S and P.
What is meant by the term activation energy?
Minimum energy S must have to allow reaction.
How can the rate of a reaction be increased and why are catalysts required to do this?
- Can be enhanced by increasing:
- temperature: increases no. Of molecules with activation energy
- concentration: increases chance of molecular collisions
- But homeostasis requires temp and conc to be kept stable - so need to use catalysts to increase reaction rate.
What are enzymes?
Biological catalysts (usually proteins) that increase the rate of reaction by lowering the activation energy - facilitates formation of the transition state.
Enzymes are:
- highly specific
- unchanged after reaction
- do not affect the reaction equilibrium
- may require associated co-factors
What are active sites?
Small cleft where substrates bind via multiple weak bonds and where the chemical reaction occurs.
Have a complementary shape to the substrate - ‘lock and key’ hypothesis or ‘induced fit’ hypothesis.
What is the ‘induced fit’ hypothesis?
Active site only forms a complementary shape after binding of the substrate.
What is V0?
The initial rate of reaction
What is the theory behind the Michaelis-Menten equation? What is V0 according to this model?
- A specific complex between the enzyme and substrate is a necessary intermediate in catalysis.
- V0 = Vmax [S] / Km + [S]
Which shape will the plot of V0 vs [S] have according to the Michaelis-Menten model?
- Rectangular hyperbola
What is Vmax?
Maximal rate when all enzyme active sites are saturated with substrate.
What is Km?
- Substrate concentration that gives half maximal velocity.
- Measure of affinity of an enzyme for its substrate?
Is a high or low Km indicative of high enzyme-substrate affinity?
- Low Km = high substrate affinity
- High Km = low substrate affinity
What is the relationship between reaction rate and enzyme concentration?
- Reaction rate is proportional to the enzyme concentration, but not the standardised rate (per L or g).
What is the linear plot version of the Michaelis-Menten equation called?
Lineweaver-Burk plot
How can Km and Vmax be determined on a Lineweaver-Burk plot?
X axis intercept = 1 / Vmax
Y axis intercept = -1 / Km
Slope = Km / Vmax
What are enzymes inhibitors?
Molecules that slow down or prevent an enzyme reaction.
What are the different types of enzyme inhibitors?
- Irreversible: bind very tightly, generally form covalent bonds (e.g. Nerve gases such as sarin).
- Reversible: non-covalent, can freely dissociate.
- competitive: binds at active site
- non-competitive: binds at another site on the enzyme
How can one distinguish between competitive and non-competitive inhibition?
Competitive inhibitor:
- no effect on Vmax (as increasing [substrate] overcomes inhibition)
- decreases Km (as reduces the proportion of enzyme molecules bound to substrate)
Non-competitive inhibitor:
- decreases Vmax (as decreases turnover number of enzyme by binding to alternative site)
- no effect on Km