Unit 3 - Reactions and Enzymes (pt.2) Flashcards
Catalysis
Speeding up a chemical reaction, one of the fundamental functions of proteins
Transition State Theory states
during a chemical rxn, there is an intermediate molecular form in which old and new covalent bonds are partially formed
Enzymes
bind to substrates (reactants) in precise orientation and lowers the transition state energy needed to arrive at the transition state, thereby speeding up the rate of the reaction. Can carry out rxns over and over again.
Enzyme or Not
1.Kinase
2.Intermediate Filament Proteins
3.Na-K+ pump
4.Ion Channel
5.Cadherin
6.Ribosome
1.Enzyme
2.Not
3.Enzyme (change ADP->ATP)
4.Not
5.Not
6.Enzyme
No reaction=no enzyme
Model and Stages of Enzyme Action
1.Initiation: reactants bind to active site in specific orientation, forming e-s complex
2.Transition State Facilitation: Interactions between enzyme and substrate lower the activation energy
3.Termination: products have lower affinity for active site and are released. Enzyme is unchanged after the rxn.
Active Site
where substrates bind in an enzyme
Induced Fit
When substrate binds to active site and enzyme changes shape slightly. Results in tighter binding of substrate to active site.
Allostery
process by which biological macromolecules (usually proteins) transmit the effect of binding at one site to another from a different functional site allowing for activity regulation
Competitive Inhibition
substrates cannot bind when regulatory molecule binds to enzyme’s active site first
Allosteric Activation
Active site becomes available to substrates when regulatory molecule binds to different site on enzyme
Allosteric Deactivation
active site becomes unavailable to substrates when regulatory molecule binds to different site on enzyme
Metabolic Pathway
refers to series of chemical rxns needed to get from one useful molecule to another
Feedback Regulation
occurs when amount of product controls activity earlier in pathway
(too much product, goes to beginning to stop even more product)
Stereospecific
a property of enzymes=only binding to one stereoisomer form of their substrates
(need correct arrangement)
Energetic Coupling
driving an endergonic rxn with an exergonic rxn (like coupled transport and Hess’s Law)