Enzymes One Flashcards

1
Q

Name the six different classifications of reaction:

A
  • Oxidoreductase- catalyse redox
  • Transferase- transfer functional group
  • Hydrolase- cause hydrolysis reactions
  • Lyase- C-N, C-C, C-O bonds break
  • Isomerase- re-arrange functional group
  • Ligase- join 2 together
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2
Q

Explain the differences between simple enzymes and holoenzymes:

A
  • Simple enzymes- composed only of protein
  • Holoenzymes- protein + other organic/inorganic molecule (advantage is these gives another level of control to the system)
  • Apoenzyme = protein component
  • Cofactor- Inorganic molecules bind temporarily to enzyme for activation (eg. Mn or Zn)
  • Co-enzyme- same but organic (co-enzyme A or NAD)
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3
Q

Define the term prosthetic group:

A
  • Not part of polypeptide chain but permanently bound
  • Metal ions or various parts of metal ions/organic compounds
  • E.g. haemoglobin
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4
Q

Define the term allosteric site:

A
  • Interacting subunits act to change shape + function to moderate catalytic activity
  • Regulatory site usually situated elsewhere
  • Characterised by larger size
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5
Q

Define the term Isoenzyme

A
  • Differ in aa composition but can act on the same substrate
  • Differ substrate turnover/ability to be regulated
  • Certain step or development specific
  • Fine metabolic tuning (e.g. lactate dehydrogenase- LDH)
  • Different levels can indicate injury in different areas
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6
Q

Describe the two main models of enzyme substrate interactions

A

o Lock and key model- fits perfectly and then catalysis occurs
o Induced fit model- doesn’t fit perfectly
• Binding of substrate leads to conformational change in active site
• Substrate strain leads to contorted bonds angles and activates the substrate
• Brings catalytic sites close to substrate bonds to be altered

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7
Q

Describe the 4 main mechanisms of how this occurs:

A
  1. Bond strain
  2. Orientating substances
  3. Acid/Base proton/donor catalysis
  4. Covalent catalysis
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8
Q

Explain how toxins affect functioning of enzymes:

A

o Organophosphates
• Bind reactive serines leading to a inactive complex
• Affect serine proteases
o Heavy Metals (Ag, Hg, Pb, Cu)
• Binds to sulphur (cysteine covalent intermediate)
• Renders the enzyme inactive

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9
Q

Explain with examples of how enzymes are used in the diagnosis of disease:

A

o Aspartate transaminase (AST)
• Found in liver, heart and skeletal muscle
• after MI levels rise 6-8 hrs then peak at 24 and are then normal again @ 5 days)
o Alanine Transaminase (ALT)
• Functions in delivery skeletal muscle carbon and nitrogen
• In acute inflammatory conditions of the liver, ALT is higher than AST
o Creatinine Kinase (CK)
• Highest activity in heart and muscle
• CK-MB >6% = AMI
• CK-MB is greater than 6% then a heart attack is likely
o Always difficult to make diagnosis based purely on clinical signs, necessary to look at a wide variety of different levels

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