1 / 25

Proof that Women are Trouble

Money = V Problems. Proof that Women are Trouble. To find a woman you need Time and Money, therefore: ”Time is Money” so Therefore: Woman = Money x Money ”Money is the root of all Problems” Therefore: Money = ( V Problems) 2. Woman = Time x Money. Time = Money. Woman = (Money) 2.

Download Presentation

Proof that Women are Trouble

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Money = VProblems Proof that Women are Trouble • To find a woman you need Time and Money, therefore: • ”Time is Money” so • Therefore: Woman = Money x Money • ”Money is the root of all Problems” • Therefore: Money = (VProblems)2 Woman = Time x Money Time = Money Woman = (Money)2 Woman = Problems

  2. Enzymes - Catalysts of Life • High specificity • Accelerates chemical reactions • Optimal at physiological pH and temperature • Organized in complexes and sequences in biochemical pathways • Conserve and transform chemical energy

  3. Specific Substrate (S) Enzyme (E) A → B without enzyme: v ≈ 1 with enzyme: v > 107 • Catalysts: • Can be regulated • Stabilise ”transition state” • Decreases the energy of activation • Do not change the equlibrium

  4. Enzymes decrease activation energy Without enzyme With enzyme G G ΔG# without enzyme ΔG# with enzyme S S ΔG ΔG P P • ΔG is the SAME ± enzyme • Enzymes are not consumed in the reaction • Enzymes change the reaction velocity but do • NOT change the chemical equilibrium

  5. P≈0

  6. P≈0 Formation of es: Removal of es: Vmax Km Derivation of the MM Equation

  7. v0 P S3 v0 Initial velocity S2 S1 S Time The Velocity of Enzyme Reactions Depends on Substrate Concentration v: catalytic activity (reaction velocity) Measured as mol/l per time k2 k1 E + S ES E + P k-1

  8. k2 k1 E + S ES E + P k-1 v0 mol/time S mol The Michaelis-Menten Equation • If V=½·Vmax s=Km • If k-1 >> k2 • Vmax=k2 ∙ et - Generally:Vmax=kcat ∙ et • kcatis also called “turnover”

  9. v0 v = constant • s S Specificity constant The Michaelis-Menten Equation at High and Low Substrate Concentrations • s>>Km v = Vmax • s<<Km

  10. k1 k2 k-1 Change unit to s-1 by using the MW of the enzyme Determination of kcat E + S ES E + P v = k2 * [ES] Vmax = kcat * [E]total

  11. kcat of Selected Enzymes

  12. v0 P S3 v0 Initial velocity S2 S1 S Time Determination of Km and Vmax

  13. Lineweaver-Burk Hofstee Wilkinson

  14. Michaelis-Menten Hofstee Lineweaver-Burk Wilkinson

  15. Kinetic Data for dNK Mutant

  16. Hill vs. Michaelis-Menten Michaelis-Menten: Vmax = 4.6 ± 0.5 Km = 16.3 ± 5.0 Hill: Vmax = 3.8 ± 0.1 Km = 11.2 ± 0.9 n = 2.2 ± 0.4 Positive cooperativity

  17. Inhibition Kinetics

  18. Higher s is needed for v= ½ Vmax Kmis increased by the factor α Competitive Inhibition

  19. Uncompetitive Inhibition Both Kmand Vmax are reduced by the factor α’

  20. Mixed Inhibition Kmis increased by the factor α/α’and Vmax is reduced by the factor α’

  21. Uncompetitive Competitive Both Kmand Vmax are reduced by the factor α’ Kmis increased by the factor α

  22. Mixed Noncompetitive Inhibition Is a subtype of mixed inhibition. It represents the rare case where α equals α’. In this situation Km remains unchanged. Kmis increased by the factor α/α’and Vmax is reduced by the factor α’

  23. Effect of Inhibitors on Apparent Km and Apparent Vmax

  24. ?

  25. Slope = n -n log K0.5 Hill Plot A plot of log[v/(V-v)] against log s should give a straight line of slope n and intercept on the vertical axis of -n.logK0.5. The intercept on the horizontal axis is equal to logK0.5.

More Related