4.1 Enzyme action Flashcards

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1
Q

Anabolic reactions

A

reactions that build up molecules

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2
Q

catabolic reactions

A

reactions that break down molecules

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3
Q

Metabolism

A

a chemical reaction involved in maintaining the living state of the cells in an organism
-> combination of anabolic and catabolic reactions

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4
Q

Catalyst

A

a substance that speeds up reactions without changing the produced substance

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5
Q

Metabolic pathway

A

sequence of enzyme controlled reactions

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6
Q

Specificity

A

can only catalyse particular reactions

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7
Q

Substrate:

A

a substance that binds to the enzyme

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8
Q

Product

A

molecules formed by enzymes

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9
Q

What are enzymes (5 points)

A

Enzymes are biological catalyst that help speed up metabolic reactions

They remain unchanged at the end of reactions and can be used again

Can catalyse large numbers of substrates into products

Increase a rate of reaction by lowering its activation energy

Can be intracellular or extra cellular

Can be prevented from working by molecules called enzyme inhibitors

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10
Q

V max

A

maximum initial velocity or rate of enzyme-catalysed reaction
–> affected by temp, pressure, pH

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11
Q

What is necessary for a reaction to occur?

A

Molecules move and collide randomly but molecules must collide in the RIGHT ORIENTATION
–> High temp & pressure increases the speed of molecules (more kinetic energy)
–>

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12
Q

Lock and key hypothesis

A

The enzyme is a lock that only a specific key aka substrate can bind to
–> due to specificity of active site
This forms an enzyme substrate complex.
–> If product/s are formed then it is the enzyme-product complex

Substrate is held due to the R groups within the active site of the enzyme being able to form interactions with the substrate, forming temporary bonds

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12
Q

Lock and key hypothesis

A

The enzyme is a lock that only a specific key aka substrate can bind to
–> due to specificity of active site
This forms an enzyme substrate complex.
–> If product/s are formed then it is the enzyme-product complex

Substrate is held due to the R groups within the active site of the enzyme being able to form interactions with the substrate, forming temporary bonds

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13
Q

Intracellular (inside cells) enzymes

A

essential role in cells and organisms
–> synthesis of polymers from monomers e.g. polysaccharides from glucose

Hydrogen peroxide is broken down by catalase to oxygen and water, prventing accumulation

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14
Q

What do all reactions need and what form does that substance take?

A

All reactions need substrates (raw materials which are constantly supplied to cell in demand
–> Nutrients are made in the form of polymers e.g. proteins or polysaccharides
–> large molecules cannot enter cells directly so they must be broken down first

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15
Q

Extracellular (outside cells) enzymes

A

Enzymes are released from cells to break down large nutrient molecules into smaller molecules during digestion
–> both single celled and multicellular organisms rely on these enzymes to make use of polymers for nutrition

16
Q

How do single celled organisms like bacteria and yeast use extra cellular enzymes

A

they release enzymes into their immediate environment
==> breaks down larger molecules like proteins and smaller molecules are produced like amino acids and glucose (which are then absorbed by cells)

17
Q

How do multicellular organisms use extra cellular enzymes? e.g. humans

A

Even though food is eaten to gain nutrients, larger molecules still need to be further digested to fit into blood stream
–> in humans, enzymes like amylase and trypsin are extracellular

18
Q

What is amylase and trypsin?

A

Amylase produced in pancreas and saliva-producing gland
–> breaks down complex carbs into simpler ones, which are ultimately broken down into glucose

Trypsin is produced by the pancreas and helps break down dietary proteins in digestive tract

19
Q

Digestion of starch

A

Starts in mouth and continues to small intestine
1. Starch polymers are partially broken into maltose, disaccharide (done by amylase)
2. Maltose is then broken down into glucose (maltase, produced in small intestine)