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Metabolism: Energy and Enzymes

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Presentation on theme: "Metabolism: Energy and Enzymes"— Presentation transcript:

1 Metabolism: Energy and Enzymes

2 Energy = the ability to do work
Kinetic Energy (energy of motion) | Potential Energy (stored energy) Energy is one of the BIG IDEAS in biology Biological systems (living things) utilize energy and molecular building blocks to grow, reproduce, and maintain homeostasis 2.A.1: All living systems require constant input of free energy (aka – food!) 2.A.2: Organisms capture and store free energy for use in biological processes (photosynthesis and respiration) 2.A.3: Organisms must exchange matter with the environment to grow, reproduce and maintain organization (eating, food webs, energy and biochemical cycling)

3 First Law of Thermodynamics - the law of conservation of energy
~REMEMBER: Energy cannot be created or destroyed Second Law of Thermodynamics - energy cannot be changed without a loss of usable energy (heat) ~When organisms convert food energy to life energy (motion, sound, etc), some energy is always lost as heat

4 Metabolism (use of energy in the body through chemistry) is driven by Enzymes
Enzyme - protein molecule that functions as an organic catalyst to speed reactions Substrate – reactant(s) in the enzymatic reaction; what an enzyme works on Activation Energy = the energy required to start the reaction; enzymes work by lowering the AE

5 Properties of Enzymes:
Enzymes are made of proteins. They speed up chemical reactions inside the cytoplasm. They are needed only in small amounts b/c they are reusable They remain unchanged after each reaction Each enzyme is specific for one substrate

6 Biology Pro-Tip Most enzyme names end in the letters -ase
Ex: The enzyme that breaks down sucrose is ….. SUCRASE The enzyme that breaks down lactose (milk sugar) is… LACTASE

7 Enzyme Function Induced Fit – enzymes and their substrate(s) fit together like a lock and key.  - enzymes can degrade (break down) or synthesize (put together)

8 Factors Affecting Enzyme Rate (speed)
1. Substrate concentration: more substrate = higher rate 2. Temperature & pH *: enzyme specific; optimum temp and pH = highest rate; too far off optimum can lead to denaturing (changing the shape) of the enzyme so that it no longer functions 3. Enzyme concentration: more enzyme = higher rate Toothpick-ase demonstration

9 Fun example: Siamese cats have a hair color enzyme that works at lower temperatures only, causing the nose and ears (lower temp areas) to become a darker color than the rest of the body.

10 Controlling Enzymes Enzymatic Inhibition - when a substance binds to an enzyme and stops or slows its function. (Usually reversible) - Competitive Inhibition- mimics the substrate and blocks the active site (picture b) - Noncompetitive Inhibition (aka allosteric inhibition) – binds away from active site, but changes enzyme shape to stop reaction (picture c)

11 Note: Some inhibitors are NOT reversible - poisons like cyanide and lead all irreversibly affect enzymes QUESTION: What type of inhibition is pictured below?

12 Enzyme Animation (Tutorial) 


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