HLST200 Study Guide - Final Guide: Disulfide, Melanin, Metabolic Pathway

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Chapter 2 Review
1. How and why enzymes work
Enzymes are catalysts which speed up a spontaneous reaction by lowering the activation energy
of the reaction
Done by inducing the transition state of the reaction
Next reaction can easily move in direction of products or reactants
Catalysis occurs at the site of substrate binding or active site
Enzymes are specific: they only catalyze reaction of a single type, or groups of molecules closely
related
Several factors used to induce the transition state( increase # of molecules in transition state):
o Bringing reactant molecules close in proximity
Binding enzymes to active site brings reactants together
o Orienting reactants to altered charge environment
Ionic group positive or negative charge alter substrate to favor catalysis
o Exposing reactants to altered environment to promote interaction
Active site may distort substrate to mimic transition state
Inclusion of enzymes enables many more molecules to reach transition state rapidly
Enzymes do not change the amount of free energy of the reaction or reactant or product. It only alters
the path the reaction takes
- What are they made of?
- What are their levels of configuration?
- Enzymes are a type of protein
- They have active sites to which if substrant attaches to decreases the level of activation
energy require and the reaction proceeds faster.
- They have 4 levels of structure
o Primary level:
Sequence of amino acid
20 amino acids in human being
Each amino acid has a carbox group, an amino group, hydrogen group and
R group which differs for each amino acid ---- all connected to alpha
carbon
Depending on R group : amino acid can be polar, uncharged, acidic or
basic
Plays an imp part in next 2 levels
o Secondary level:
Folds in certain protein
Hydrogen bonding between amino acid and carboxyl
o Tertiary level
Leads to 3 d structure
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Document Summary

Ionic group positive or negative charge alter substrate to favor catalysis: exposing reactants to altered environment to promote interaction, active site may distort substrate to mimic transition state. Inclusion of enzymes enables many more molecules to reach transition state rapidly. Enzymes do not change the amount of free energy of the reaction or reactant or product. It only alters the path the reaction takes. They have active sites to which if substrant attaches to decreases the level of activation energy require and the reaction proceeds faster. They have 4 levels of structure: primary level, sequence of amino acid, 20 amino acids in human being, each amino acid has a carbox group, an amino group, hydrogen group and. It is the loss of structure and function of a protein dueto extreme conditions and causes unfolding from its conformation. Conditions such as extreme temperature changes can break hydrogen bonds leading to it.

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