BCH2011 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Uncompetitive Inhibitor, Allosteric Modulator, Competitive Inhibition

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Enzymes are subject to reversible or irreversible inhibition: Enzymes inhibitors are molecules that interfere with catalysis, slowing or halting enzymatic reactions. One common type of reversible inhibition is called competitive. A competitive inhibitor competes with the substrate for the active site of an enzyme. While the inhibitor (i) occupies the active site, it prevents binding of the substrate to the enzyme. Many competitive inhibitors are structurally similar to the substrate and combine with the enzyme to form an ei complex, but without leading to catalysis. Because the inhibitor binds reversibly to the enzyme, the competition can be biased to favor the substrate simply by adding more substrate. When [s] far exceeds [i], the probability that an inhibitor molecule will bind to the enzyme is minimized and the reaction exhibits a normal vmax. Vo = 1/2vmax, the apparent km, increases in the presence of inhibitor by the factor of alpha.

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