Factors affecting enzyme activity (d) Flashcards

1
Q

General trend for temperature

A
  • increasing temperature increases the kinetic energy of the particles
  • the particles move faster and collide more frequently
  • thus more frequent (successful) collisions between enzyme and substrate molecules = increases rate of reaction
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2
Q

Temperature coefficient

A
  • a measure of how much a rate of reaction increases with a 10°C rise in temperature
  • e.g. if Q₁₀=2, rate of reaction doubles with a 10°C temperature increase for enzyme-controlled reactions
  • Q₁₀= R₂/R₁
  • Where R₂ is the rate at the higher temperature and R₁ is the rate at the lower temperature.
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3
Q

Denaturation

A
  • at higher temperatures the bonds holding the protein together vibrate more + increases in vibrations strain the bond - they then break
  • this changes the precise tertiary structure of the protein - changing its shape - becoming denatured
  • changes the active site so it is no longer complementary to the substrate - it no longer fits so enzyme loses its function as a catalyst
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4
Q

Optimum temperature

A
  • optimum = the temperature at which the enzyme has the highest rate of activity - can vary
  • once denatured above the optimum, decrease in rate of reaction is rapid
  • at this point, the temperature coefficient no longer applies
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5
Q

Temperature extremes

A
  • enzymes adapted to the cold tend to have more flexible structures - particularly at the active site, so smaller temperature changes will denature them
  • enzyme present in thermophiles are more stable due to increased number of bonds (H bonds + sulfur bridges) so more resistant to change as temp. rises.
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6
Q

pH

A
  • pH changes H⁺ ion concentration - acidic = more H⁺ ions, alkaline = less H⁺ ions
  • H⁺ ions interact with polar and charged R-groups, thus changing its concentration changes the degree of interactions and affects the interaction of R-groups with each other
  • increase in H⁺ ions = decrease in pH = less R-groups able to interact with each other - leading to bonds breaking and enzyme shape changing (and vice versa)
  • enzyme only functions within a narrow pH range
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7
Q

Optimum pH, renaturation + denaturation

A
  • optimum pH - active site will be in right shape at certain hydrogen ion concentration
  • renaturation: when pH changes from the optimum, the structure of the active site alters; if it returns to optimum, then the protein will resume its normal shape and catalyse the reaction again
  • structure is irreversible when pH changes more significantly = denatures = decreases rate
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8
Q

Substrate concentration

A
  • increasing substrate concentrate increases number of substrate particles in a volume = higher collision rate = more enzyme-substrate complexes formed = increased rate of reaction
  • Vₘₐₓ = the maximum initial velocity or rate of the enzyme-catalysed reaction. rate increases upto its Vₘₐₓ.
  • at the Vₘₐₓ all active sites are occupied by substrate particles and no more enzyme-susbtrate complexes can be formed until products are released from the active site
  • only way to increase the rate is to increase the temperature or add more enzyme - limiting factors etc
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9
Q

Enzyme concentration

A
  • increasing enzyme concentration increases available number of active sites in a volume - leading to the formation of enzyme-substrate complexes at a faster rate
  • more active sites are available so rate increases to a higher Vₘₐₓ, until substrate concentration is the limiting factor again.
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10
Q

Practicals to measure rate of enzyme activity

A
  1. how fast the product appears - e.g. collecting oxygen from catalase catalysing the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide in a gas syringe or upturned measuring cylinder
  2. measure the disappearance of substrate - e.g. amylase catalyses starch into maltose, so starch can be detected using iodine solution (KI and I); time how long it takes for starch to disappear using a spotting tile. alter the conditions.
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11
Q

Practical for the effect of temperature on enzyme activity

A
  1. set up boiling tubes with same volume + concentration of hydrogen peroxide
  2. set up apparatus to measure the volume of oxygen produced
  3. put each in a different temperature water baths. put a boiling tube of catalase in each temperature water bath and wait 5 minutes
  4. pipette the same volume of oxygen produced into each boiling tube
  5. record volume of oxygen produced in the first 60 seconds
  6. repeat at each temperature 3 time and calculate the mean
  7. calculate the rate of reaction at each temp and compare
    Different factors can be experimented: for this, pH should be constant by using a buffer solution
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12
Q

Serial dilutions

A

Change concentrations of water and the enzyme to produce the desired concentration of the enzyme

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