Enzymes and factors affecting enzyme activity Flashcards

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1
Q

What do enzymes do?

A

They are large proteins that speed up reactions inside living things by acting as catalysts.

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2
Q

What are catalysts?

A

A catalyst is a substance which increases the speed of a reaction, without being changed or used up in the reaction.

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3
Q

Describe the ‘lock and key’ model.

A

Every enzyme has an active site with a unique shape.
The substrate involved in the reaction has to fit into the active site for the enzyme to work. (Enzyme/substrate complex formed).
The enzyme changes shape slightly as the substrate binds.
Enzyme/product complex.
Substrate is broken down, releasing two products.

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4
Q

What factors affect enzyme activity?

A

Temperature and pH.

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5
Q

How does temperature affect enzyme activity?

A

Affects the rate of reaction, a higher temperature increases the rate - but an enzyme denatures if it gets too hot so the substrate can’t fit anymore.

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6
Q

What is meant by denaturing?

A

When the shape of the active site changes as a result of bonds within the enzyme breaking.

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7
Q

What is the optimum temperature?

A

The temperature that enzymes work best at - around 37 degrees.

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8
Q

How does pH affect enzyme activity?

A

Affects the rate of reaction - if the pH is too high or too low, it affects the bonds holding the enzyme together and so the enzyme denatures.

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9
Q

What is meant by optimum pH?

A

The pH that enzymes work best at - optimum pH depends where the enzyme works.

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10
Q

How do you calculate the rate of reaction?

A

rate = 1000 / time

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11
Q

What do amylase do?

A

An example of carbohydrases.
Made in the salivary glands, pancreas and small intestine,
Works in the mouth and small intestine.
Breaks down starch into sugars.

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12
Q

What do proteases do?

A

Made in the stomach, pancreas and small intestine.
They work in the mouth and small intestine.
Breaks down proteins into amino acids.

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13
Q

What do lipases do?

A

Made in the pancreas and small intestine.
Work in the small intestine.
Breaks down lipids (fats and oils) into glycerol and fatty acids.

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14
Q

What do digestive enzymes do?

A

They break down big molecules (starch, proteins and fats) into smaller, soluble molecules so that they can be absorbed into the bloodstream.

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15
Q

What are the products of digestion used for?

A

To build new carbohydrates, lipids and proteins - some glucose is used for respiration.

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