Enzymes: Outcome: I can describe how the structure of an enzyme correlates to its function(s) Drill: What background knowledge do you have on enzymes?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Enzyme Regulation. Chemical Reactions Thousands of chemical reactions occur in living organisms every second. Energy is required to start each reaction=
Advertisements

Concept 8.4: Enzymes speed up metabolic reactions by lowering energy barriers A catalyst is a chemical agent that speeds up a reaction without being consumed.
Enzymes Biological catalysts Increase rate of reactions
Metabolism: Energy and Enzymes Chapter 6. 2 Flow of Energy Energy: the capacity to do work -kinetic energy: the energy of motion -potential energy: stored.
Thermodynamics and Metabolism. 2 Metabolism Metabolism: all chemical reactions occurring in an organism Anabolism: chemical reactions that expend energy.
ENZYMES.
Enzymes Chapter 8 (sections 4 & 5) Biology – Campbell Reece.
SBI 4U: Metablic Processes
Slide 1 of 50 Enzymes  Enzymes are biological catalysts  Proteins  Catalyst  Lower activation energy  Increases the rate of the reaction  Affects.
Chapter 6 Enzymes. Metabolic Reactions Metabolism – All the reactions that happen in the cell – Reactions have two sides 1.What goes into the reaction.
1 Amino Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes Enzymes Enzyme Action Factors Affecting Enzyme Action Enzyme Inhibition.
ENZYME ACTION!!!. What are Enzymes? An enzyme is a biological catalyst. It speeds up a chemical reaction without being used up in the reaction or becoming.
Enzymes. n Catalytic proteins n Catalyst - a chemical agent that changes the rate of reaction, without being consumed by the reaction.
Forms of Energy Energy is the capacity to cause change Energy exists in various forms, some of which can perform work Kinetic energy is energy associated.
Enzymes. A. Are Proteins (usually) that speed up metabolic reactions by lowering the activation energy. A. Some chemical reactions will occur spontaneously,
Enzymes & Regulation of Enzymes Catalysts speed up reactions by lowering the activation energy associated with reactions. In the following exergonic reaction,
1.4 ENZYMES. Enzyme are _________________ catalysts.  Either tertiary or quaternary.  Names ususually end in ‘ase.’ CATALYST: substance that _____________.
Lecture 4 Enzymes. Proteins Catalyze all cellular reactions Enzymes are not changed by the reactions, and can be reused.
Enzymes. Let's Review: ΔG and rxn spontaneity Let's Review: Protein Structure.
Enzymes Concepts
Enzymes Catalyze (speed up) reactions Recognize and bind specific substrates Act repeatedly Most are proteins Reaction does not alter them.
ENZYMES. Enzymes are Catalysts  Catalytic proteins: change the rate of reactions w/o being consumed  Enzymes speed up reactions by lowering the activation.
Ground Rules of Metabolism Chapter What Is Energy? Capacity to do work Forms of energy –Potential energy –Kinetic energy –Chemical energy.
Energy and Metabolism Chapter 6. 2 Flow of Energy Energy: the capacity to do work -kinetic energy: the energy of motion -potential energy: stored energy.
Enzymes Review of Reaction Terms  G = (Free Energy of Products) - (Free Energy of Reactants)
Enzymes Biological Catalysts Proteins that change the rate of cellular reactions without being consumed in the reaction.
Enzymes. Enzyme: a macromolecule (usually a protein) that acts as a catalyst; a chemical agent that speeds up a reaction without being consumed (used.
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings For a chemical reaction to begin, reactants must absorb some energy –This energy.
Enzymes Explain enzyme action and factors influencing their action Temperature pH Substrate concentration Feedback inhibition Competitive inhibition.
Chapter If all Exergonic Reactions happen spontaneously… …then how come all of them haven’t already happened?
Enzymes. Amino Acid Basic Structure Primary Structure.
 Metabolism  Totality of an organism’s chemical processes  Catabolic pathways (release energy)  Breakdown  Respiration  Anabolic pathway  Build.
 Spontaneous chemical reactions occur without a need for outside energy but may be very slow  Free energy: Δ G  Catalyst : a chemical agent that speeds.
Enzymes. Enzymes-definition  Act as catalysts, lowering activation energy needed for reactions-speed up reaction.  Substrate binds to enzyme’s active.
Biochemistry Unit Workbook: pg. 61 Textbook: pg. 69.
Chapter 3 Enzymes. Chemical Reactions Chemical reactions: – Involve breaking of chemical bonds in reactants Requires activation energy – Making new chemical.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Concept 8.4: Enzymes speed up metabolic reactions by lowering energy barriers.
ENZYMES. Outline Review – What is an enzyme? Models of enzyme activity ◦ Lock and key ◦ Induced fit model Factors affecting enzyme activity ◦ Temperature.
8.2.  Chemical reactions are continually occurring in our bodies to keep us alive.  These chemical reactions must occur at low temperatures so that.
Enzymes!. Enzymes speed up the rate of metabolic reactions by lowering energy barriers A catalyst is a chemical agent that speeds up a reaction without.
Lesson 5 Enzymes. Catalyst: something that increases the rate of reactions Enzymes are biological catalysts Often ends with –ase Most enzymes are proteins.
Enzymes Chapter 8.
Enzymes Catalyst Activation Energy Substrates Enzyme Activity
Today: Enzymes.
Enzymes Regulatory enzymes are usually the enzymes that are the rate-limiting, or committed step, in a pathway, meaning that after this step a particular.
Enzymes pp
Concept 8.4: Enzymes speed up metabolic reactions by lowering energy barriers A catalyst is a chemical agent that speeds up a reaction without being consumed.
Enzymes.
Part 2 INHIBITION ALLOSTERIC REGULATION FEEDBACK INHIBITION
Energy and Metabolism Chapter 6.
ENZYMES MICROBIOLOGY.
An Introduction to Metabolism
Chapter 5 The Working Cell.
Enzymes.
ENZYMES.
What are Enzymes? Catalysts change the rate of the reaction without being altered themselves. Enzymes are biological catalysts. Enzymes are (mostly) proteins,
Enzymes.
Part 2 INHIBITION ALLOSTERIC REGULATION FEEDBACK INHIBITION
Enzymes Chapter 8 Section 8.2.
Enzymes pp
Living Metabolism Part 2
CHAPTER 5 The Working Cell
Enzymes and Feedback Inhibition
CONCEPT 3: ANALYZING CELL METABOLISM AND ENZYME FUNCTION (CH 8, AP LAB 2) Holtzclaw: “Metabolism” pg Campbell: Read pg , Look.
Living Metabolism Part 2
Enzymes and Metabolism
Living Metabolism Part 2
2.5 - Enzymes.
SBI 4U: Metablic Processes
Living Metabolism Part 2
Presentation transcript:

Enzymes: Outcome: I can describe how the structure of an enzyme correlates to its function(s) Drill: What background knowledge do you have on enzymes?

Enzyme Structure and Function Enzymes are protein catalysts They speed up the rate at which reactions occur Lower the activation energy by creating a microenvironment that is energetically more favorable for a reaction

Features of Enzymatic Reactions Enzymes do not make anything happen that could not happen on its own they just make it happen much faster. Reactions do not destroy or use up enzyme molecules. Each type of enzyme recognizes and binds to only certain substrates. - ‘substrate specificity”

Enzyme-catalyzed Reactions Reactants in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction known as substrates. They bind to the enzyme

Enzyme-catalyzed Reactions Substrates bind to the enzyme's active site interactions between the enzyme and the substrate stabilize the transition state decrease the activation energy.

Active Site Pocket or crevice Site where substrates are bound Site of reaction catalysis Only substrates of specific size, shape, solubility, and charge can bind Basis of enzyme specificity

Do Enzymes Act Alone? Some enzymes require cofactors to function normally. these are either metal ions or small organic molecules called coenzymes. The cofactors usually are in the active site and are involved in transition state stabilization.

Regulation of Enzyme Action Enzyme activity can be regulated by molecules which are not part of the enzyme Competitive inhibition: molecule similar in size and shape to substrate binds to active site. “competes” with substrate for active site

Allosteric Regulation Allosteric regulation either increases or decreases enzyme activity depending on the way in which enzyme shape changes

Allosteric Activation allosteric activator enzyme active site active site cannot bind substrate vacant allosteric binding site active site altered, can bind substrate

Allosteric Inhibition allosteric inhibitor allosteric binding site vacant; active site can bind substrate active site altered, can’t bind substrate

Regulation of Enzyme Action Allosteric inhibition: regulatory molecule binds at site other than active site (allosteric = different structure) binding changes shape of active site

END PRODUCT (tryptophan) Feedback Inhibition Feedback inhibition of enzyme activity occurs in pathways which require multiple enzyme-catalyzed steps The end product of the pathway inhibits the first enzyme in the pathway when there is an abundance of product the pathway is shut down enzyme 2 enzyme 3 enzyme 4 enzyme 5 enzyme 1 SUBSTRATE END PRODUCT (tryptophan) A cellular change, caused by a specific activity, shuts down the activity that brought it about

Enzymes: Exit Ticket: What is the difference between competitive inhibition and allosteric inhibition?