Lecture 10 - Control of Enzyme activity Flashcards

1
Q

What is the upper limit for kcat, and Km?

A

the diffusion controlled limit (10^9 s-1 M-1)

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2
Q

When is an enzyme considered a perfect catalyst?

A

When kcat/Km above 10^8 s-1 M-1

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3
Q

What is an enzyme inhibitors?

A

a compound that binds to an enzyme and reduces its activity

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4
Q

What is an irreversible inhibitor?

A

an inhibitor that binds covalently to an enzyme

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5
Q

What is a reversible inhibitor?

A

an inhibitor that does not covalently bind to the enzyme

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6
Q

What type of inhibitor can be competitive or non-competitive?

A

reversible

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7
Q

What is the benefit of a reversible inhibitor?

A

It can be released from the enzyme after binding, leaving it in its original condition

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8
Q

What does an irreversible inhibitor react with?

A

specific amino acid side chain (usually in active site) and covalently bonds

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9
Q

What does an irreversible inhibitor to?

A

binds to the enzyme and permanently inactivates it

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10
Q

What are the mutually exclusive possibilities in competitive inhibition?

A

E + S -> ES or E + I -> EI

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11
Q

What happens to Vmax and Km with competitive inhibition?

A
  • Vmax is the same (because infinite substrate would outcompete the inhibitor)
  • Km increases (more substrate required to get to Vmax/2)
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12
Q

What happens during non-competitive inhibition?

A

inhibitor binds at a different site than the substrate. So enzyme can bind substrate, inhibitor, or both

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13
Q

What happens differently in pure non-competitive inhibition?

A

binding changes the structure of the active site such that substrate still binds, but transition state stabilisation is no longer optimal

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14
Q

What happens to Vmax and Km in pure non-competitive inhibition

A

Vmax - decreases
Km - stays the same

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15
Q

What happens to Vmax and Km during mixed non-competitive inhibition?

A

Vmax and Km both change

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16
Q

what is finer control?

A

turning an enzyme on or off

17
Q

What is a sensible regulation strategy that avoids making unnecessary metabolic intermediates?

A

feedback and feedforward regulation

18
Q

What types of regulation does glycogen phosphorylase have?

A

feedforward activation, feedback inhibition, allosteric PTM regulation, Non - competitive inhibition

19
Q

What are some methods of enzyme regulation?

A

covalent modification, allosteric effects, proteolytic cleavage, turn gene expression on/off (BIOC221), degrade enzyme (BIOC223)