Biochemistry: Enzymes and Biological Catalysts Flashcards

1
Q

what do enzymes effect and not affect

A
  • speed of the reaction

- equilibrium

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2
Q

in what conditions do enzymes work

A
  • body temp
  • near neutral pH
  • in aq solutions
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3
Q

how are enzymes specific

A

recognise a limited range of substrates

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4
Q

how are enzymes potent

A

convert many substrates to products quickly

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5
Q

what is the activation energy and why is it present

A
  • energy required for enzymes to work

- stops reactions occurring in normal conditions

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6
Q

transition state

A

reaction intermediate substance that contains the most free energy

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7
Q

what do enzymes bind to and what do they do

A
  • transition state

- lower activation energy

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8
Q

describe glycogen storage disease

A

enzyme deficiency resulting in failure of glycogen to enter its phosphorylated state

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9
Q

what are co-factors

A

metal ions

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10
Q

what are co-enzymes

A

organic molecules

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11
Q

what do co-factors form in the enzymes

A

a metallo protein - metal co-ordination centre

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12
Q

how do co-enzymes associate with enzymes and what happens when they bind

A
  • transiently

- change or restructure themselves

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13
Q

prosthetic group

A

tightly bound co-enzymes

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14
Q

apoenzyme

A

enzyme without a co-factor

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15
Q

holoenzyme

A

enzyme with a co-factor

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16
Q

what type of reaction are co-enzymes involved in and what do they do

A
  • redox reactions

- stabilise transition states

17
Q

what are many co-enzymes derived from

A

vitamins

18
Q

what do symptoms of vitamin deficiencies reflect and what are the classes of deficiencies

A
  • the loss of enzyme activity

- functional or dietary

19
Q

describe substrate binding to enzyme

A
  • substrate binds to an active site

- this contains the amino acids essential for catalysis and specific interactions

20
Q

what is the lock and key model

A

the substrate and active site are complementary shapes

21
Q

what is the induced fit model

A

substrate binding induces a conformational change leading to complementary fit

22
Q

what other factors can influence enzyme activity

A

temperature and pH

23
Q

describe the active site of pancreatic serine proteases

A

contain reactive serine residues that catalyse the hydrolysis of peptides at specific sites

24
Q

isoenzyme

A

isoforms of enzymes, enzymes that catalyse the same reaction but have different properties and structure

25
Q

why can isoenzymes catalyse the same reaction but have a different make-up

A
  • synthesised at different stages of development

- present in different tissues/cellular locations

26
Q

what is the clinical use for isoezymes

A

diagnostic tests

27
Q

how is lactate dehydrogenase used as a diagnostic test

A

it requires hypoxia sensitive transcription factors so a decreased presence in blood indicates tissue hypoxia

28
Q

how is creatine kinase used as a diagnostic test

A
  • dimeric protein that binds to muscle sarcomeres
  • M form (muscles) and B form (brain)
  • heart produces both
  • M form in blood suggests MI, B form in blood suggests stroke
29
Q

how does phosphorylation regulate enzyme activity

A

phosphorylation is a reversible covalent modification that converts enzymes to and in/active form

30
Q

what carries out phosphorylation reactions

A

protein kinases

31
Q

describe a phosphorylation reaction

A

fast, reversible

side groups form phosphate esters

32
Q

how do irreversible covalent modification regulate enzyme activity

A

results in an active form of enzyme irreversibly

33
Q

zymogen

A

inactive precursor of an enzyme

34
Q

what do zymogens do

A

irreversible transform into active enzymes via covalent bond cleavage

35
Q

give examples of zymogens

A
  • tripsinogen to trypsin via enteropeptidase
  • chymotrypsinogen to chymotrypsin via trypsin
  • pancreatic enzymes, blood clotting factors, clot-dissolving enzymes