BCMB 3100 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Altitude Sickness, Carbonic Anhydrase, Menton

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Lecture notes 9/6 of enzyme inhibition: reversible- when an inhibitor can bind but can come off that enzyme and attack, competitive a. i. Competitive with substrate with available active sites a. ii. With a competitive inhibitor, it doesn"t change (aka es) the way the catalysis was formed. You can get to the es without changing vmax by adding enough substrate. With competitive, your es is not being affected. a. ii. 2. Km is a measure of how much substrate is required for the enzyme to function. So when the km increase, that means you need more substrate for the a. ii. 2. a. If you have an inhibitor competing for the active site: uncompetitive- binds to es thus lowering catalytic rate. you need to increase the active site. b. i. This happens due to you not making enough. Es, no matter how much substrate you"re dealing with, you"ll always be dealing with your esi. b. i. 2.

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