Module 2 Section 4 - Action of Enzymes Flashcards

1
Q

What do enzymes do

A

They speed up chemical reactions by acting as biological catalyst

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2
Q

Enzymes are ……

A

Biological catalysts

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3
Q

What is an example of enzymes being used at a cellular level

A

Respiration

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4
Q

What is an example of enzymes being used for organisms as a whole

A

Digestion in mammals

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5
Q

What do enzymes affect

A

Structures in an organism
Functions of an organism

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6
Q

Enzyme action can be ….

A

Intracellular and extracellular

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7
Q

What does intracellular mean

A

Within cells

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8
Q

What does extracellular mean

A

Outside cells

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9
Q

What is the toxic by product of many cellular reactions

A

Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2)

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10
Q

What happens if hydrogen peroxide is left to build up

A

It kills cells

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11
Q

What is the enzyme responsible for the breakdown of H2O2

A

Catalase, hydrogen peroxide to harmless oxygen and water

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12
Q

Give an example of an intracellular enzyme

A

Catalase

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13
Q

Give an example of extracellular enzyme

A

Amylase and Trypsin

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14
Q

Where does catalase work

A

Inside the cell (intracellular)

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15
Q

Where does amylase and trypsin work

A

Outside cells (extracellular) in the digestive system

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16
Q

Where is amylase found

A

Saliva (secreted to the mouth by salivary glands)

17
Q

What does amylase catalyse

A

The hydrolysis of starch to maltose (a sugar) in the mouth

18
Q

What does trypsin catalyse

A

The hydrolysis of peptide bonds - turns big polypeptides to smaller ones

19
Q

Where is trypsin produced

A

Cells in pancreas

20
Q

Where is trypsin secreted to

A

Small intestine

21
Q

What type of protein are enzymes

A

Globular protein

22
Q

Enzymes have…

A

An active site, which has a specific shape

23
Q

What is the active site

A

The part of the enzyme that the substrate molecules bind to

24
Q

How is the specific shape of the active site determined

A

By the enzymes tertiary structure

25
Q

What need to happen for the enzyme to work

A

Substrate has to fit into the active site.

26
Q

What happens if the substrate doesn’t match the active site

A

If the substrate doesn’t match the active site the reaction won’t be catalysed. Enzymes work few substrates - usually one.

27
Q

What is activation energy

A

A certain amount of energy that needs to be supplied to the chemicals before the reaction will start - often provided as heat.

28
Q

What do enzymes do to the activation energy

A

Reduces activation energy - speeds up rate of reaction

29
Q

What is formed when the substrate binds to an enzymes active site

A

Enzyme-substrate complex

30
Q

The formation of the enzyme substrate complex lowers ….

A

The activation energy

31
Q

Why does the formation of the enzyme-substrate complex lower the activation energy

A

-if two substrate molecules need to be joined, attaching to the enzyme holds them close together reducing any repulsion so they can bind easily
-if the enzyme is catalysing a breakdown reaction fitting into the active site puts a strain on bonds in the substrate. This strains means the substrate molecule breaks more easily

32
Q

Enzymes only work with

A

Substrates that fit their active site

33
Q

What did early scientists come up with to study action of enzymes

A

Lock and key theory

34
Q

What is the lock and key theory

A

This is where the substrate fits into the enzyme in the same way that a key fits into a lock

35
Q

Why did scientists realise that lock and key wasn’t totally perfect

A

New evidence showed that enzyme-substrate complex changed shape slightly to complete the fit.