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Published byMax Pocklington Modified over 9 years ago
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Enzymes
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Enzymes are… Catalysts – is any substance that works to accelerate a chemical reaction Most enzymes are proteins
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How do catalysts speed up reactions? The activation energy in chemistry is the energy needed by a system to initiate a particular process Catalysts decrease activation energy
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Lock and Key model
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Active Site
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Substrate: substance that an enzyme reacts with Active Site: part of the enzyme that reacts or binds to the substrate
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Enzyme-Substrate Complex
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Enzymes are specific and Complementary Complementary: complement one another; shaped for precise pairing Specific: particular, precise – Only the correct substrate can fit into the enzyme’s active site
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Enzymes end in -ase Carbohydrase- breaks down carbohydrates into simple sugars Amylase- breaks down starch Protease – breaks down proteins into amino acids Lipase- breaks down lipids into fatty acids and glycerol
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Digestive End products MacromoleculeDigestive End Product CarbohydrateSimple Sugar ProteinAmino Acids Lipid3 fatty acids and glycerol Nucleic AcidNucleotide
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Temperature effects enzymes Increasing temperature increases enzyme activity until it reaches an optimum value Increasing temperature past that point denatures the enzyme
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Denature shape of the protein is altered through some form of external stress will no longer be able to carry out its cellular function
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pH effects enzymes Certain pH value causes optimal enzyme activity Too low or too high pH will denature the enzyme
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Enzymes are reused or recycled In a written equation, enzymes appear on both the reactant and product side Substrate + enzyme enzyme and products reactants products They are not used up They are recycled and being used over and over gain
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The function of most proteins depends primarily on the (1) type and order of amino acids (2) environment of the organism (3) availability of starch molecules (4) nutritional habits of the organism
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Enzyme molecules normally interact with substrate molecules. Some medicines work by blocking enzyme activity in pathogens. These medicines are effective because they (1) are the same size as the enzyme (2) are the same size as the substrate molecules (3) have a shape that fits into the enzyme (4) have a shape that fits into all cell receptors
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The diagram below represents two molecules that can interact with each other to cause a biochemical process to occur in a cell. Molecules A and B most likely represent (1) a protein and a chromosome (2) a receptor and a substrate (3) a carbohydrate and an amino acid (4) an antibody and a hormone
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