Course Subject: Biochemistry Course Topic: Enzymes
Course Subject: Biochemistry Course Topic: Enzymes
Course Subject: Biochemistry Course Topic: Enzymes
Learning Objectives:
Enzyme Specificity- is the extent to which an enzyme’s activity is restricted to specific substrate, a specific group of
substrate, a specific type of chemical bond, or a specific type of chemical reaction.
Temperature - reaction of most chemical reactions increase with temperature and approximately double for
each 10° rise
-most enzyme become denatured and insoluble within minutes of being subjected to temperatures
of 60° and above
Enzyme Concentration - velocity of reaction is directly proportional to enzyme concentration in the presence of
excess substrate
Substrate concentration
Machaelis-Menten hypothesis
The higher the substrate concentration, the more substrate bound to enzyme and the greater
the rate/ velocity of the reaction.
When all enzyme is bound to substrate, there will be no further increase in velocity
When the substrate is present in an adequate amount (all enzymes are bound and saturated),
the rate of the reaction depends only in the enzyme concentrate.
First Order Reaction
Substrate readily binds to free enzyme at a low-substrate concentration
Rate depends on substrate concentrate
Zero Order Reaction
High substrate concentration saturate all available enzymes; fewer binding site are available for
attachment
Reaction velocity reaches maximum ; rate falls to zero
Rate depends only on enzyme concentration
Inhibitors- substances that inhibit enzymatic reaction
Competitive Inhibition - inhibitors binds the active site of enzyme.
Substrate and inhibitors compete for the same binding site
Can be reversed by the addition of substrate molecules.
Noncompetitive Inhibition - inhibitor binds enzyme at a place other than the active site of enzyme.
Alter the configuration of the enzyme in such a way as to reduce or abolish excess of the
substrate to the active site, causing a decrease in enzyme activity.
May be reversible (if binding is reversible or may be separated) or irreversible (if inhibitor
destroys a part of enzyme)
Post-test:
1. What will happen to enzymes when they are at high temperature?
3. What is the name of the molecule or substance that the enzyme reacts with?
a. vitamin
b. lipids
d. carbohydrates
d. protein
a. type
b. rate
c. reactants
d. products
7. In an enzymatic reaction, the amount of ______ determines the amount of product produced.
a. catalyst
b. reactants
c. oxygen
d. enzyme
8. When all enzymes are bound to substrate, there will be no further increase in velocity is called?
A. maximum velocity
B. maximum tolerance
C. increased velocity
D. increased tolerance
9. What is the 'active site' of an enzyme, and how is it critical in how an enzyme functions?