+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction...

Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction...

Date post: 11-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: rebecca-mitchell
View: 214 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
27
Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Chapter 15

Enzymes

Chemistry 20

Page 2: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzyme

Eact

Eact

- Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions).

- Lower the activation energy for the reaction.

2HIH2 + I2 H…H

I … I

… …

- Less energy is required to convert reactants to products.

- But, they are not changed at the end of the reaction.

- They are made of proteins.

Page 3: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzyme

- Most of enzymes are globular proteins.

- Proteins are not the only biological catalysts.

- Most of enzymes are specific. (Trypsin: cleaves the peptide bonds of proteins)

- Some enzymes are localized according to need. (digestive enzymes: stomach)

Page 4: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Names of Enzymes

- By replacing the end of the name of reaction or reacting compound with the suffix « -ase ».

Oxidoreductases: oxidation-reduction reactions (oxidase-reductase).

Transferases: transfer a group between two compounds.

Hydrolases: hydrolysis reactions.

Lyases: add or remove groups involving a double bond without hydrolysis.

Isomerases: rearrange atoms in a molecule to form a isomer.

Ligases: form bonds between molecules.

Page 5: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzyme

- Substrate: the compound or compounds whose reaction an enzyme catalyzes.

- Active site: the specific portion of the enzyme to which a substrate binds during reaction.

Page 6: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzyme catalyzed reaction

An enzyme catalyzes a reaction by,

• Attaching to a substrate at the active site (by side chain (R) attractions).

• Forming an enzyme-substrate

(ES) complex.

• Forming and releasing products.

• E + S ES E + P

Enzyme: globular protein

Page 7: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Lock-and-Key model

- Enzyme has a rigid, nonflexible shape.

- An enzyme binds only substrates that exactly fit the active site.

-The enzyme is analogous to a lock.

- The substrate is the key that fits into the lock

Page 8: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Induced-Fit model

Problems:

1. Why Enzyme-Substrate Complex is not stable?(no reason for the reaction to occur)

2. X-ray diffraction: size and shape of the actice site chanegs when a substrate enters.

Page 9: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Induced-Fit model

- Enzyme structure is flexible, not rigid.

- Enzyme and substrate adjust the shape of the active site to bind substrate.

- The range of substrate specificity increases.

- A different substrate could not induce these structural changes and no catalysis would occur.

Page 10: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Factors affecting enzyme activity

Activity of enzyme: how fast an enzyme catalyzes the reaction.

1. Temperature

2. pH

3. Substrate concentration

4. enzyme concentration

5. Enzyme inhibition

Page 11: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Temperature

- Enzymes are very sensitive to temperature.

- At low T, enzyme shows little activity (not an enough amount of energy for the catalyzed reaction).

- At very high T, enzyme is destroyed (tertiary structure is denatured).

- Optimum temperature: 35°C or body temperature.

Page 12: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

pH

- Optimum pH: is 7.4 in our body.

- Lower or higher pH can change the shape of enzyme. (active site change and substrate cannot fit in it)

- But optimum pH in stomach is 2. Stomach enzyme (Pepsin) needs an acidic pH to digest the food.

- Some damages of enzyme are reversible.

Page 13: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Substrate and enzyme concentration

Maximum activity

Enzyme concentration ↑ Rate of reaction ↑

Substrate concentration ↑ First: Rate of reaction ↑

End: Rate of reaction reachesto its maximum: all of the enzymesare combined with substrates.

Page 14: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzyme inhibition

Inhibitors cause enzymes to lose catalytic activity.

Competitive inhibitor

Noncompetitive inhibitor

Page 15: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Competitive Inhibitor

- Inhibitor has a structure that is so similar to the substrate.

- It competes for the active site on the enzyme.

- Solution: increasing the substrate concentration.

Page 16: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Noncompetitive Inhibitor

- Inhibitor is not similar to the substrate.

- It does not compete for the active site.

- When it is bonded to enzyme, change the shape of enzyme (active site) and substrate cannot fit in the active site (change tertiary structure).

- Like heavy metal ions (Pb2+, Ag+, or Hg2+) that bond with –COO-, or –OH groups of amino acid in an enzyme.

- Penicillin inhibits an enzyme needed for formation of cell walls in bacteria: infection is stopped.

- Solution: some chemical reagent can remove the inhibitors.

Inhibitor

Site

Page 17: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Competitive and Noncompetitive Inhibitor

Page 18: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzyme cofactors

protein

protein

protein

Metal ion

Organicmolecules

(coenzyme)

Simple enzyme (apoenzyme)

Enzyme + Cofactor

Enzyme + Cofactor (coenzyme)

Metal ions: bond to side chains. obtain from foods. Fe2+ and Cu2+ are gain or loss electrons in redox reactions. Zn2+ stabilize amino acid side chain during reactions.

Page 19: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzyme cofactors

- Enzyme and cofactors work together.

- Catalyze reactions properly.

Page 20: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Vitamins and Coenzymes

Water-soluble vitamins: have a polar group (-OH, -COOH, or …)

Vitamins are organic molecules that must be obtained from the diet.(our body cannot make them)

Fat-soluble vitamins: have a nonpolar group (alkyl, aromatic, or …)

- They are not stored in the body (must be taken).

- They can be easily destroyed by heat, oxygen, and ultraviolet light (need care).

- They are stored in the body (taking too much = toxic).

- A, D, E, and K are not coenzymes, but they are important: vision, formation of bone, proper blood clotting.

Page 21: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzyme Regulation

Enzyme regulation:

1. Feedback control

2. Proenzymes

3. Allosterism

4. Protein Modification

5. Isoenzymes

Page 22: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Feedback control: reaction product of one enzyme controls the activity of another.

1. Feedback Control

A B C DE1 E2 E3

feedback inhibition

Page 23: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

2. Proenzymes (Zymogens)

Proenzyme (zymogen): an inactive enzyme that becomes an active enzyme after a chemical change (remove or change some polypeptides).

Trypsinogen (inactive enzyme)

Trypsin (active enzyme)

Digestive enzyme (hydrolyzes the peptide bonds of proteins)

Why we do this process?

pH = 5 - 6

pH = 2

Page 24: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

3. Allosterism

Regulation takes place by means of an event that occurs at the site other than the active site but affects the active site.

Allosteric enzyme

Negative modulation: inhibits enzyme action

Positive modulation: stimulates enzyme action

Page 25: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

4. Protein Modification

Usually a change in the primary structure.(addition of a functional group by covalent bond to the apoenzyme)

ATP ADP

kinase

phosphatase

Pi

PK PKP

inactiveactive

H2O

pyruvate kinase (PK) is the active form of the enzyme;

it is inactivated by phosphorylation to pyruvate kinase phosphate (PKP).

Page 26: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

5. Isoenzymes

Enzymes that have different forms;

but they catalyze the same reaction.

Different activities

Page 27: Chapter 15 Enzymes Chemistry 20. Enzyme E act - Like a catalyst, they increase the rate of reaction (biological reactions). - Lower the activation energy.

Enzymes in medicine

- Most of enzymes are in cells.

- Small amounts of them are in body fluids (blood, urine,…).

Level of enzyme activity can be monitored.

Find some diseases


Recommended