Biochemistry 2280A Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Enzyme, Enzyme Kinetics, Lysozyme

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Biochemistry 2280 Midterm
Enzyme Catalysis
Describe what an enzyme is and how it accelerates biochemical reactions
- most enzymes are proteins
- they are extremely specific; have targeted or restricted
ligands (substrates)
- the transition state of a chemical reaction is defined as
the state corresponding to the highest energy along the
reaction coordinate (between reactants and products)
- in order for the reaction to occur, enough activation
energy must be inputted to raise the reactant to the
transition state
- therefore the rate of reaction is controlled by activation
energy
- enzymes decrease the activation energy
- binding of the substrate pushes the enzyme toward transition state, straining the substrate
Understand the different types of reactions that enzymes can perform
Hydrolytic cleavage using water
Condensation connect molecules together
Isomerization rearrange bonds
Oxidation-reduction gain or loss of electrons
Group transfer transfer chemical group
Understand the induced fit hypothesis
o the initial interaction between enzyme and substrate is relatively weak, but these weak
interactions rapidly induce conformational changes in the enzyme that strengthen binding
o the enzyme changes conformation, increasing the affinity to the transition state and
stabilizing it, so reducing the activation energy to reach it
Describe the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme, lysozyme
- natural antibiotic in tears, saliva, mucus, egg whites
- contains a mixture of secondary structures
- destructs bacterial cell walls
- active site binds polysaccharide (it has six sugars interacting with protein)
- lysozyme catalyzes the hydrolytic reaction that severs the bond connecting two of those
sugars
- lysozyme-substrate binding induces a distortion of one sugar, wearing the bond to be broken
- two acidic residues are posited adjacent to the bond they receive and donate hydrogen
ions
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Document Summary

Describe what an enzyme is and how it accelerates biochemical reactions. They are extremely specific; have targeted or restricted ligands (substrates) The transition state of a chemical reaction is defined as the state corresponding to the highest energy along the reaction coordinate (between reactants and products) In order for the reaction to occur, enough activation energy must be inputted to raise the reactant to the transition state. Therefore the rate of reaction is controlled by activation energy. Binding of the substrate pushes the enzyme toward transition state, straining the substrate. Understand the different types of reactions that enzymes can perform. Describe the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme, lysozyme. (cid:858)natural antibiotic(cid:859) in tears, saliva, mucus, egg whites. Active site binds polysaccharide (it has six sugars interacting with protein) Lysozyme catalyzes the hydrolytic reaction that severs the bond connecting two of those sugars. Lysozyme-substrate binding induces a distortion of one sugar, wearing the bond to be broken.

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