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Chapter 8: Enzymes 8.4 and 8.5
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Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Energy in Reactions Activation Energy Chemists call the energy that is needed to get a reaction started the activation energy.
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Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Enzymes Some chemical reactions that make life possible are too slow or have high activation energies. These chemical reactions are made possible by catalysts.
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Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Enzymes Enzymes speed up chemical reactions that take place in cells.
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Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Enzyme Action The Enzyme-Substrate Complex Enzymes provide a site where reactants can be brought together to react, reducing the energy needed for the reaction. The reactants of enzyme-catalyzed reactions are known as substrates.
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Enzymes work by forming enzyme-substrate complex - area known as active site - binding of substrate to active site forms enzyme-substrate complex - after binding to substrate, product is released and enzyme can be reused
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Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Enzyme Action An Enzyme-Catalyzed Reaction
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Enzymes are specific (substrate specific to enzyme) - because of the binding at the active site, the substrate is very specific to the enzyme Most enzyme names end in -ase - sucrase is an enzyme that reacts with sucrose - enzyme names such as pepsin and trypsin give no clues as to their function
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Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Enzymes can be affected by any variable that influences a chemical reaction. – pH values – Changes in temperature – Enzyme or substrate concentrations Regulation of Enzyme Activity
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