BIO 201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 17: Activation Energy, Pepsin, Chymotrypsin

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Bio 201
Lara Hutson
Lecture 17: Enzymes (Ch. 8, pp. 151-156)
Overview:
- Activation energy
- Catalysts
- Enzymes
o Induced fit
o Mechanisms
o Factors that affect activity
Catalysts lower the activation energy of a reaction
This increases the rate of the reaction.
All catalysts:
- Lower the activation energy by altering the path of a reaction, i.e. changing the transition state.
- Do NOT alter reactants or products
- Do NOT alter G of the reaction
- Is NOT itself permanently altered by the reaction.
Enzymes are biological catalysts
- Most enzymes are proteins (a few are RNAs: ribozymes)
- The substrates(s) is/are the reactant(s) acted on by the enzyme.
- Substrates bind to the enzyme active site
- Enzyme active site conformation and chemistry make them specific for one or a very small
number of substrates.
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Induced fit
- Binding of substrate to active site results in conformational change in enzyme
- The conformational change results in enzyme activity.
- Two reactants interact, and induced fit allows it to have more attraction.
-
Enzyme mechanism
- Proximity and orientation
- Strain
- Chemistry
Proximity and orientation
Binding sites for two substrates
may be near each other and oriented so that they can interact
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Document Summary

Induced fit: mechanisms, factors that affect activity. Catalysts lower the activation energy of a reaction. Lower the activation energy by altering the path of a reaction, i. e. changing the transition state. Do not alter g of the reaction. Is not itself permanently altered by the reaction. Most enzymes are proteins (a few are rnas: ribozymes) The substrates(s) is/are the reactant(s) acted on by the enzyme. Enzyme active site conformation and chemistry make them specific for one or a very small number of substrates. Binding of substrate to active site results in conformational change in enzyme. Two reactants interact, and induced fit allows it to have more attraction. Proximity and orientation may be near each other and oriented so that they can interact. Strain straining chemical bonds and increasing likelihood and breakage. Chemistry substrate, making conversion to product more favorable. An enzyme may use any one or a combination of these mechanisms.

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