Enzymes Flashcards

1
Q

What is the transition state?

A

High energy intermediate that lies between S and P

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2
Q

What is the activation energy?

A

Minimum energy S must have to allow reaction

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3
Q

What is the active site?

A

The place where substrates bind and where the chemical reaction occurs. Formed by amino acids from different parts of the primary sequence. They are clefts or crevices that have a complementary shape to the substrate

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4
Q

What is Vmax?

A

Maximal rate when all enzyme active sites are saturated with substrate

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5
Q

What is Km?

A

Substrate concentration that gives half the maximal velocity (units of concentration)

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6
Q

What does low km give rise to?

A

High affinity for substrate

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7
Q

What does high km give rise to?

A

Low affinity for substrate

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8
Q

What are Vmax values measured in?

A

Measured In amounts per unit time

1 unit is the amount of enzyme that converts one micromole of product per minute under standard conditions

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9
Q

What are competitive inhibitors?

A

These bind to the active site of an enzyme

Competes with substrate

Affects Km not Vmax

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10
Q

What are non competitive inhibitors?

A

Binds at another site on the enzyme, not active site

Affects Vmax not Km

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11
Q

How does temperature increase the rate of reaction?

A

Increases number of molecules with activation energy

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12
Q

How does concentration increase the rate of reaction?

A

Increases chance of molecular collisions

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13
Q

Other than lowering activation energy, how else do enzymes increase the rate of reaction?

A

Provides a platform for molecules to react so increases the chance of collisions.

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14
Q

What are some important features of enzymes?

A

Highly specific, unchanged after reaction, do not affect equilibrium, increase rate of reaction

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15
Q

What is the induced fit hypothesis?

A

Binding of substrates to an enzyme can induce changes in the conformation - the active site only forms a complementary shape after binding of the substrate

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16
Q

How are substrates bound to active sites?

A

By multiple weak bonds

17
Q

When reaction rate is shown as a function of substrate concentration, what is usually the shape of the graph?

A

Rectangular hyperbola (the reaction reaches a maximum velocity)

18
Q

What is the Mchaelis-Menten equation and what does it predict?

A

V0 = Vmax[S] / Km + [S]

V0 - initial velocity

Predicts that a plot of V0 vs substrate concentration will be a rectangular hyperbola

19
Q

For example, if Hexokinase has a Km of 0.1 mM and Glucokinase has a Km of 5 mM, which has a higher affinity for it’s substrate (glucose) ?

A

Hexokinase - hence why HK is always active whereas GK only becomes active when glucose levels peak after feeding

20
Q

What are reversible inhibitors?

A

Non-covalent, can freely dissociate (competitive and non competitive)

21
Q

What is one unit in enzyme kinetics?

A

1 unit = the amount of enzyme that converts 1 micro mol of product per minute under standard conditions

22
Q

The Michaelis-Menten equation can be rearranged to give a linear plot in the from y = mx + c. What is this?

A

y = mx + c

1/V0 = (Km/Vmax * 1/[S]) + 1/Vmax

Therefore intercept = 1/V0
Gradient = Km/Vmax

23
Q

What are irreversible inhibitors?

A

Bind very tightly, generally form covalent bonds

24
Q

What is an example of an irreversible inhibitor?

A

Nerve gases such as sarin (interferes with degradation of acetylcholine at neuromuscular junctions - inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase)

25
Q

Which type of inhibitor affects Km?

A

Competitive

26
Q

Which type of inhibitor affects Vmax?

A

Non-competitive

27
Q

What overcomes the effect of competitive inhibitors?

A

Adding enough substrate

28
Q

Why does Km increase with competitive inhibition

A

Because the inhibitor competes with the substrate for the active site so Km increases

29
Q

Assuming the Km values of ethanol and methanol are 1 mm and 10 mM respectively, explain why giving ethanol to a patient with methanol poisoning would be beneficial.

A

Ethanol has a lower Km value than methanol so the enzyme has a higher affinity to ethanol than to methanol. Therefore, more ethanol will bind to the enzyme than methanol.

30
Q

What are zymogens?

A

Inactive precursors of enzymes