BIOL2771 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Metabolic Pathway, Reaction Rate, Competitive Inhibition

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Biochem Lecture 3: Michaelis-Menten Enzyme Kinetics
Terminology:
- V0 = initial reaction velocity or rate
o NOTE: reaction rate as reactants (substrates) initial rate important
- Vmax = max velocity or rate, i.e. when the enzyme is saturated with substrate
- Km = Michaelis-Menten constant
- Km = substrate concentration that gives half of Vmax
Km: tells us about affinity of enzyme for substrate, and substrate preference
- If high: affinity of enzyme for its substrate is low (high conc substrate required to
reach ½ Vmax)
- If low, affinity of enzyme for its substrate is high
-
o E.g. hexokinase prefers Glucose > Fructose
Michaelis-Menten plot:
- V0 plotted against substrate concentration
- Michaelis-Menten enzymes become saturated with their substrate. Non-enzymatic
reactions do not show substrate saturation
-
- Double-reciprocal plots can be used to determine Vmax & Km
o Double reciprocal plots can be used to determine how
an inhibitor works
o Has applications in pharmaceuticals, etc.
Competitive inhibition: substrate & inhibitor both bind at active site
- Km Vmax same
- More substrate needed to out-compete inhibitor
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Document Summary

V0 = initial reaction velocity or rate: note: reaction rate as reactants (substrates) initial rate important. Vmax = max velocity or rate, i. e. when the enzyme is saturated with substrate. Km = substrate concentration that gives half of vmax. Km: tells us about affinity of enzyme for substrate, and substrate preference. If high: affinity of enzyme for its substrate is low (high conc substrate required to reach vmax) If low, affinity of enzyme for its substrate is high: e. g. hexokinase prefers glucose > fructose. Michaelis-menten enzymes become saturated with their substrate. Double-reciprocal plots can be used to determine vmax & km: double reciprocal plots can be used to determine how an inhibitor works, has applications in pharmaceuticals, etc. Competitive inhibition: substrate & inhibitor both bind at active site. Uncompetitive inhibition: inhibitor binds another site, not the active site. Mixed inhibition: inhibitor binds to either e or es. Michaelis-menten vs allosteric enzymes: allosteric enzymes do not obey m-m kinetics.

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