BIO 1105 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Catechol Oxidase, Catechol, Peroxidase

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16 Dec 2017
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Enzymes: proteins made of long chains of amino acids that control reactions and form complex shapes. Each type of enzyme has a precise structure and function and each enzyme catalyzes a specific reaction. The complex shape of the active site on the enzyme"s surface usually couples with only one type of substrate. Enzymes are biocatalysts: they accelerate metabolic reactions to biologically useful rates. Enzymes catalyze/accelerate reactions by lowering the activation energy needed for the reaction to occur. Substrate: reacting molecules that enzymes bind to form enzyme-substrate complex: this complex stresses or distorts chemical bonds to form a transition state in which the substrate becomes more reactive and the metabolic reaction accelerates. Energy of activation: energy needed to form the transition state; is lowered by the enzyme. Active site: the enzyme"s site of attachment and the surrounding parts of the enzyme that stress the substrate"s bonds.

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