Biochemistry 2280A Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Competitive Inhibition, Isomerase, Lysozyme

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Enzymes do not change equilibrium - they change kinetics. Binding forces holding an enzyme and substrate together can be ionic, electrostatic, hydrophobic, or some combination. Covalent bonds are less common because they require more energy and release is more difficult. (catalysis) Enzymes act on, but are unchanged by substrates. Enzymes bind their ligands (substrates) and promote a chemical reaction between them. Enzymes function in transition states and do not change the free energy of reactants or. Enzymes have a high affinity for both molecules involved, which brings them together. Enzymes must demonstrate: high catalytic power, high specificity products. they bring molecules closer together to catalyze a reaction (cid:224) lower the energy of the activation. This is determined by certain amino acid side chains within the enzyme"s active site (only %5 or less of enzyme surface) Two functional regions of the active site: binding site/pocket - determines specificity, catalytic site promotes reaction.

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