BIOL 112 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Metabolic Pathway, Competitive Inhibition, Activation Energy

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15 Mar 2016
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BIOL 112 Full Course Notes
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Catalysts increase the rate of spontaneous reactions (reactions with g). They do not change g values and they are not used up by catalysis. In biology, these are proteins called enzymes, and sometimes rnas that have folded into a 3d structure, especially within the ribosome. Enzymes work by lowering the activation energy, and they are crucial in our body, because at 37 degrees, most spontaneous reactions do not proceed, because the activation energy barrier cannot be overcome. When reactants (called substrate) bind to the active site of the enzyme forming an enzyme-substrate complex, the enzyme often undergoes a small conformational change (a shape change) which brings the substrates into a transition state. The transition state is characterized by a lower activation energy, which speeds up the reaction. As soon as the products leave the active site, the enzyme reverts to its original shape.

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