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Enzyme Review

Enzyme Review. Are you ready?. Define Catalyst. A molecule that allows stable molecules to react quickly. What is an enzyme?. and what is it made of?. An enzyme is a biological catalyst. It is a protein and made of a long chain of amino acids. What do enzymes do?.

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Enzyme Review

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  1. Enzyme Review • Are you ready?

  2. Define Catalyst. • A molecule that allows stable molecules to react quickly.

  3. What is an enzyme? and what is it made of?

  4. An enzyme is a biological catalyst • It is a protein and made of a • long chain of amino acids

  5. What do enzymes do? They speed up chemical reactions by……. Lowering Activation Energy needed to start the reaction.

  6. What enzyme did we use in our labs? Catalase What reaction does it speed up? The breakdown of Hydrogen Peroxide into water and oxygen. H2O2--------) H2O + O2

  7. Why are enzymes necessary? • So that chemical reactions in living things can happen fast enough • Example- In the human body— • Hydrogen Peroxide would break down without catalase, but it would be so slow that H2O2 would build up and become TOXIC!

  8. Name the two kinds of reactions. • Exothermic • Endothermic

  9. Which requires energy inputand which gives off heat? • Endothermic RXNS require energy to be added IN to keep going. • Exothermic RXNS give off energy. Energy EXITS.

  10. What does it mean to say a reaction is “spontaneous”? • Once it starts it will continue until the end. • No energy input is required after the activation energy.

  11. Define Activation Energy. • The measure of how hard molecules have to collide to get a reaction to begin. • The push to get a reaction started.

  12. Which kind of molecules have high activation energy—Stable or Unstable? • Stable molecules don’t interact easily– they have HIGH activation energy. Need a bigger push to get started. • Unstable molecules react more easily--They are highly reactive, have LOW activation energy.

  13. What is KMT? Kinetic Molecular Theory The idea that molecules are always moving and when they collide hard enough with one another, they will react.

  14. What happens when enzymes are exposed to heat? A little heat can speed up a reaction by making the molecules move faster---- BUT

  15. What happens when there is too much heat or the wrong pH? • Enzymes DENATURE • They unravel. They no longer keep the same shape so they won’t fit the substrate any more. • They need to be in their OPTIMUM range of temp or pH to function the best!

  16. Explain Lock and Key Model • Enzyme is the • Lock • Substrate is the • Key • The active site is the • Keyhole

  17. What happens at the active site? The enzyme and the substrate bind together. What is Induced Fit?

  18. Amino acids in the active site • Attract amino acids on the substrate due to different charges and polarity • They interact and the bonds are broken and new ones form.

  19. Can an enzyme be used in any reaction?

  20. NO • They are very SPECIFIC, SELECTIVE, PICKY • They only work with one substrate.

  21. Are enzymes used up in a reaction? NO They can be used over and over again.

  22. What happens when you add more enzyme? • The rate of reaction increases– Happens faster

  23. What happens when you add more substrate? • No change in rate, BUT • You get more product.

  24. Thanks for playing Enzyme Review

  25. Biochemistry Review • Biology is the study of living things. • Organic or Biochemistry is the study of the chemical reactions in living things.

  26. What is the smallest unit of matter? • An Atom

  27. Atoms- What area is positive and what area is negative? • The nucleus is positive • The surrounding electron orbitals are negative • Where is the mass? • In the nucleus

  28. Atoms • Atomic Number= # of p+ • Atomic Mass= p+ + n0 • Charge= p+ - e- • First Energy Level= can hold .. • 2 electrons • Second Energy level can hold.. • 8 Electrons

  29. What is a molecule? • Atoms bonded together with covalent bonds

  30. How are ions and isotopes same/different? • They are both atoms and the number of protons stays the same, BUT • Ions have different charges (different number of electrons) • Isotopes have different masses (different number of neutrons)

  31. What makes a molecule polar? • Uneven sharing of electrons gives the molecule partially negative areas and partially positive areas • Give an example of a polar molecule. • Water – H20= Oxygen has a partial negative charge, hydrogen has a partial positive charge.

  32. What is a compound? • A substance made of two or more different elements. • Could be bonded by ionic or covalent bonds

  33. What is the most common element in living things? • Carbon • It is present in all four of the biomolecules • Which biomolecule contains nitrogen? • Protein

  34. Let’s talk about bonds! • What are the three types we have covered? • Ionic, Covalent, and Hydrogen bonds

  35. A Bond formed when molecules share electrons • Covalent Bonds

  36. A Bond between two oppositely charged atoms or molecules (one positive one negative) • Ionic bonds

  37. An intermolecular force between polar molecules • A Hydrogen Bond

  38. What is the relative strength of these bonds? • Covalent/ Ionic >>>>>>>Hydrogen Bonds

  39. pH scale 1-14 • What does it measure? • The acidity or basicity of a solution • 7 is neutral • Acids are … • Below 7 • Bases are … • Above 7

  40. Four Categories of Biomolecules • Proteins • Carbohydrates • Lipids • Nucleic Acids • These are very large molecules so we call them Macromolecules!

  41. Carbohydrates- What do we know? • Ratio of C:H:O is • 1:2:1 • Monomers are: • saccharides-simple sugars • Polymers are: • polysaccharides- starches

  42. Lipids • Monomers are glycerol and fatty acids • Polymers are Trigycerides- a glycerol with three fatty acid chains • Lipids can be fats or oils, • They are nonpolar- don’t mix with water • Saturated fats are solid (butter, lard) • Unsaturated are oils (olive, vegetable)

  43. Proteins • Monomer is an amino acid (20 types), each amino acid has an R group on its central carbon. • Polymers are polypeptides, two or more amino acids bonded together

  44. What is the process that builds polymers from monomers? • Dehydration Synthesis (synthesize is to make) • Remember this process gives off a molecule of …… • H20

  45. Breaking down polymers into monomers is called • Hydrolysis- “Lysis” is to break • What molecule is needed for this to happen? • H20 must be present and breaks into its parts to replace the H’s and O

  46. In our lab, we tested for different biomolecules: • Iodine- What does it test for and what’s a positive reaction? • Iodine tests for starch- If starch is present it turns.. • Blue-Black

  47. What tests for simple sugars (Glucose)? • Benedicts plus heat (it starts out blue) • Positive reaction is a change to green, yellow or red depending on how much glucose is present

  48. What does Biuret test for? • Proteins • What color change do you see if protein is present? • It changes from blue to a purple-lavender to violet.

  49. How did we check for Lipids? • Paper towel test • Translucent (can see through it) when lipids were present.

  50. This is the end.Best of Luck!

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