enzymes Flashcards
substrate binding site [active site]
- substrates bind to specific sites through interactions with amino acids, coenzymes, metal ions. spatial geometry dictates specificity
activation energy and transition sites
binding of substrates promotes formation of a transition state which lowers the activation energy
catalytic cycle
1) substrate binds
2) product formed
3) product unbinds
lock and key model
- complementary 3D surface recognises substrate
- substrate binds through H-bonds, hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions
- binding can be prevented by steric hindrance and charge repulsion
induced fit model
- as substrates bind, enzymes undergo a conformational change
- side chains of active amino acids reposition
- binding interactions increase
- not a rigid lock, but a dynamic surface
the transition state complex
- the transition state is the point of maximal bond strain
- activation energy is the free energy difference between substrate and transition state complex
- overall rate of reaction is determined by overall number of molecules acquiring the AE.
cofactors/coenzymes
- catalytic properties and often dependent on non-peptide molecules called cofactors- metal ions and organic enzymes. tightly bound cofactors are known as prosthetic group. in humans coenzymes are usually synthesised from vitamins
cofactors: metal ions
positively charged metal ions act as electrophiles- assist in substrate binding or stabilise anions. can acceot or even donate electrons in redox reactions
isoenzymes
enzymes that differ in sequence (ie. different genes) but catalyses the same reaction. they can have different kinetic parameters and substrate specificities.
multiple enzyme complexes
some enzymes catalysing multiple consecutive steps in metabolic pathways associate to form multi-enzyme complexes
diagnostic enzymology
measurement of enzyme activity/concentration, can include serum enzymes, secreted enzymes and enzymes released by damaged/malignant cells. cell leakage can be caused by reduced oxygen, toxuc chemicals, microorganisma, immune responses, genetic conditions. released enzymes are affected by metabolism and excretion, they therefore have different serum half-lives
Vo
initial rate of enzyme activity
[S]
substrate concentration
Vmax
the maximum possible rate at that enzyme
the Vmax is directly proportional to the amount of enzyme used
Km (michaelis constant)
the [S] resulting from Vmax/2 (divided by 2)
- enzyme velocity is most sensitive to changes in [S] close to Km.
- if Km is shown, the [S] required to saturate the enzyme can be calculated.
- high Km= low substrate efficacy and vice versa