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Published byCharlene Anderson Modified over 8 years ago
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Enzyme s
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The Need for Enzymes Many important exergonic rxns require more E A than cells can provide Other rxns require specific collision angles, slowing rxn rate
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Lowering E A Enzymes lower E A to a level that’s safe and attainable
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Catalysis 1. Enzyme binds substrate(s) at active site 2. Enzyme changes shape to separate or combine molecules 3. Enzyme reverts to original shape
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Specificity Enzymes are substrate specific –3-D shape makes enzymes specialized –An enzyme binds substrate(s) at active site ActiveSite
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Rate of Rxns As [substrate] ↑, Rate ↑ [substrate] Rate EnzymeSaturation
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Rate of Rxns Temperature –As temp ↑, collisions are more frequent (rate ↑) –At high temps, h-bonds break, changing enzyme shape (rate ↓) Temperature Rate Denaturation Optimal Range
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Rate of Rxns
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Enzyme Regulation Molecules bind to enzymes to alter their functions Activation –Cofactors Nonprotein helpers Coenzymes – Organic cofactors –Cooperativity Substrate = Activator
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Enzyme Regulation Active Site Allosteric Site Inhibition –Competitive Blocks active site –Noncompetitive Changes enzyme shape Changes enzyme shape
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Enzyme Regulation Feedback Inhibition –Product inhibits enzyme
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