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Enzymes

Enzymes. Protein molecules that act as catalysts. Speed up the rate of reactions Are not permanently changed or used up Reactants: what the catalysts change. To the right is a Scanning Electron Microscope image of rutile crystals grown using Altair's process. Catalysts.

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Enzymes

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  1. Enzymes Protein molecules that act as catalysts

  2. Speed up the rate of reactions Are not permanently changed or used up Reactants: what the catalysts change To the right is a Scanning Electron Microscope image of rutile crystals grown using Altair's process. Catalysts

  3. Join monomers to make polymers Break down polymers Phosphorylate molecules Bring atoms together so they can trade electrons What kind of bonding is this? polypropylene can be widely found in items such as plastic bottles and boxes, dishwasher-safe food containers, patio furniture, rope, upholstery, diapers, and carpeting. It did not become commercially viable until a catalyst that increased its production could be found Jobs enzymes do

  4. Naming enzymes • Depends on substrates and kinds of reactions • Nearly all enzymes end in “Ase” • Polycarbonate seen under a microscope

  5. Activation energy • Adding energy to a substance makes it more reactive • For different reactions different energy thresholds are needed • Enzymes lower that threshold

  6. Enzyme substrate complexes • Functional groups determine an enzyme’s shape • The part the substrate binds to is the active site • It looks like a pocket or groove • This means that an enzyme is very specific

  7. Helper molecules • Some enzymes need to contain an additional molecule or ion to do their job • Cofactors are helpers held on by ionic or other kinds of bonds • Coenzymes are non-protein organic molecules • Like vitamins • They don’t get used up so we don’t need too many

  8. Factors that effect enzyme activity • Vmax this is the fastest number of substrates an enzyme can process • Competitive inhibitors: look like the enzymes substrate so they block up the active site • More substrate can reduce their effects

  9. Factors that effect enzyme activity • Noncompetitive inhibitors: effects don’t reverse • Cyanide, prevents Iron from doing its job in breathing • That’s why its fatal

  10. Allosteric enzymes • Have 2 or more binding sites • Binding to a regulatory site changes the shape of the inactive enzyme, either stimulating or inhibiting enzymatic reaction

  11. from Drug Discovery Today11 481-493 (2006)

  12. “statins” Inhibitors of the enzyme HMG CoA reductase The first enzyme in the pathway that makes cholesterol

  13. Metabolic syndrome • a combination of medical disorders that increase one's risk for cardiovascular disease and diabetes. • Leads to • 1. Obesity, particularly around the waist (having an "apple shape") • 2. Elevated blood pressure • 3. An elevated level of triglycerides and a low level • of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) — the "good" cholesterol • 4. Resistance to insulin

  14. Complex interplay between glucose/fat/cholesterol metabolism

  15. Enzymes? • Biological washing powders • Drug targets • Tests for disease/test kits • Clinical tests for liver damage

  16. Biological washing powders Contain lipases and proteases to digest fat and protein in stains Work at lower temperatures

  17. Energy and Enzymes Life requires energy. Almost all energy for life is derived from the sun. A “factoid” - The sun’s energy that strikes Earth each day is equivalent to one million Hiroshima-sized atomic bombs. Photosynthesis harnesses about 1% of that energy – 10,000 “atomic bomb equivalents” per day.

  18. Chemistry and Life One unromantic but productive way of viewing life is to see it as a set of coordinated chemical reactions. This leads to an obvious question – What determines what chemical reactions are possible?

  19. Chemical Reactions Whether a chemical reaction will or won’t occur under particular conditions is determined by the laws of thermodynamics. Keeping it simple - If the overall amount of order is decreased by a reaction, the reaction is favored. Generally, if energy is released in a reaction, the reaction is favored.

  20. The Direction of Spontaneous Reactions (and what it takes to go the other way)

  21. By coupling favorable to unfavorable reactions. Life Requires Lots of Unfavorable Reactions – How Is This Possible? favorable reactions unfavorable reactions

  22. The “Nature of Life” – Coupling Favorable to Unfavorable Reactions

  23. ATP - Life’s Energy Currency Energy is released when ATP is hydrolyzed (broken down) to ADP. ATP is restored from ADP and an input of energy. ATP’s energy is used to drive endergonic (energy-requiring) reactions.

  24. The Way ATP Often Works

  25. Model of the surface of an enzyme. Enzymes Speed Biochemical Reactions Enzymes are biological catalysts – substances that speed a reaction without being altered in the reaction. Most enzymes are proteins, some are RNA. Enzymes are essential for life.

  26. Enzymes Lower a Reaction’s Activation Energy

  27. Enzyme Action

  28. Hexokinase, an enzyme (blue), binding its substrate, glucose (yellow). The Fit Between Enzyme and Substrate is Critical and Precise

  29. Many Enzymes Work by Altering the Shape of Their Substrates The active site of an enzyme is where substrate is bound.

  30. Enzyme Deficiency and Health Most genetic disorders are due to a deficiency in enzyme function. This archival photo shows three children with the enzyme deficiency that causes phenylketonuria.

  31. Metabolic Pathways The synthesis of biological molecules often requires many enzyme-catalyzed steps. The entire set of steps is a metabolic pathway.

  32. Metabolic Pathways The metabolic pathway that produces tryptophan – an amino acid. This is one of hundreds of metabolic pathways essential for life.

  33. Enzyme Activity is Often Regulated Feedback inhibition - a common form of enzyme regulation in which the product inhibits the enzyme .

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