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Published byArchibald Dennis Modified over 9 years ago
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Enzymes
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Characteristics of Enzymes 1.Proteins 2.Catalysts a.Speed up chemical reactions without being used up
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Structure 1.An enzyme’s shape is very specific. 1.If changed, we call it… DENATURED –Can no longer catalyze reactions –What kinds of things do you think could denature a protein?
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Denaturation a.Disruption of protein structure by 1.Heat: Break apart H bonds and disrupt hydrophobic attractions 2.Acids/ bases: Break H bonds between polar R groups and ionic bonds 3.Heavy metal ions: React with S-S bonds to form solids 4.Agitation: Stretches chains until bonds break
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Applications of Denaturation a.Hard boiling an egg b.Wiping skin with alcohol swab for injection c.Cooking food to destroy E. coli
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How do enzymes work? 1.Lower Activation Energy to speed up rates of reaction a.Reactions require energy to begin…enzymes lower the amount of energy required.
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Naming 1.Often end in “–ase” 2.Prefix refers to what substance it causes to react a.Examples: maltase, sucrase, protease, carboxypeptidase
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Catalyzing Process 1.Unique 3-D shape determines which chemical reaction it catalyzes 2.Important Vocab: a.SUBSTRATE: A specific reactant that an enzyme acts on.
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2.Important Vocab (cont.): b.ACTIVE SITE: the region of the enzyme where the substrate will bind
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3.The enzyme and substrate bond to form the enzyme-substrate complex substrate enzyme Active site Enzyme-substrate complex
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Lock and Key Model + E + S ES complex E + P S P P S
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Enzymes are very specific!
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1.An enzyme’s optimal temperature = highest rate of reaction a.Most human enzymes work best at 35-40 ºC. Optimum temperature Reaction Rate Low High Temperature TEMPERATURE
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WATCH OUT!!! If the temperature gets too high, the enzyme may be denatured!
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pH (Acid/Base) The enzymes in your stomach will not work in your blood. Most of your enzymes work best around a neutral pH
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Rate of Reaction enzyme lab…
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Substrate Concentration Increasing substrate concentration increases the rate of reaction up to a certain point. a.Limited by enzyme concentration, why? a.Maximum activity reached when all of enzyme combines with substrate
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Substrate Concentration (cont.) Maximum activity Reaction Rate substrate concentration
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Enzyme Inhibition 1.Inhibitors: cause a loss of catalytic activity a.May be competitive or noncompetitive
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2.Competitive Inhibition a.A competitive inhibitor 1.Has a structure similar to substrate 2.Occupies active site a.“Competes” with substrate for active site 3.Effects can be reversed by increasing substrate concentration
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Competitive Inhibition Image
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3.Noncompetitive Inhibition a.A noncompetitive inhibitor 1.Binds to the enzyme (not at active site) & changes the shape of enzyme & active site a.Substrate cannot fit altered active site 2.Effect is not reversed by adding substrate
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Noncompetitive Inhibition Image
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