Chapter 4- Enzymes

Cards (18)

  • state two examples of competitive inhibitors
    STATINS
    • competitive inhibitors of an enzyme which synthesises cholesterol, prevents synthesis of cholesterol 
    • Helps people reduce blood cholesterol 
    APSPIRIN
    • Irreversibly inhibits the active site of COX enzymes
    • Preventing synthesis of prostaglandins and thromboxane, responsible for producing pain and fever 
  • State two examples of non competitive inhibition
    ORGANOPHOSPHATES
    • Insecticides and herbicides
    • Irreversibly inhibit enzyme acetyl cholinesterase, necessary for nerve impulse transmission
    • Can lead to cramps, paralysis or even death
    PROTON PUMP INHIBITORS
    • Used to treat long term indigestion
    • Irreversibly block enzyme system responsible for secreting H ions into the stomach
    • Prevents stomach ulcers
  • What is inorganic between a cofactor and coenzyme?
    Cofactor=inorganic
    • C
    • O
    • Factor
    • Is
    • Not organic
  • How are inorganic cofactors obtained
    In the diet as mineral ions/minerals
  • What cofactor does amylase contain? What does it do and why is it a coenzyme, not a cofactor?
    • Contains a chloride ion
    • Necessary for the formation of correctly shaped active site
    • Is inorganic, and a mineral/ion
  • What are many coenzymes derived from?
    Vitamins
  • What are prosthetic groups?
    • Cofactors
    • Required by enzymes to carry out specific functions
    • Permanent feature of the protein (unlike some cofactors which are temporarily bound)
  • State two examples of a prosthetic group
    • Zinc ions form part of the structure carbonic anhydrase
    • Carbonic anhydrase is necessary for the metabolism of carbon dioxide
    • Each haem group in Haemoglobin contains iron (Fe2+) which binds reversibly to carbon dioxide oxygen and water, and irreversibly to carbon monoxide
  • What are precursor enzymes?
    enzymes produced in an inactive form
  • Why are enzymes produced in an inactive form as precursor enzymes?
    • May cause damage within the cell producing them or tissues where they are released
    • Enzyme action may need to be controlled and only activated under certain conditions
  • What needs to happen to a precursor enzyme for it to be activated?
    • Change in tertiary structure to the active site
    • Can be achieved by the addition of a cofactor
  • What is a precursor enzyme called before and after a cofactor is added?
    • Before- apoenzyme
    • After- holoenzyme
  • What is an enzyme that can be activated by a change in conditions eg- pH or temperature?
    zymogens or proenzymes
  • State an example of an intercellular enzyme
    • Hydrogen peroxide
    • Catalase breaks it down into oxygen and water
    • found in both animal and plant tissues
  • Why do nutrients need to be broken down outside cells sometimes?
    • Some in the form of polymers are too large to enter through the cell surface membrane
    • So need to be broken down into smaller components
  • State examples of single celled organisms that have extracelluar enzymes
    • Fungi
    • Bacteria
    • Yeast
  • State examples of extracellular enzymes inside humans
    • Amylase- digests starch
    • Trypsin- digests proteins
  • Explain how pH affects enzyme activity
    • Hydrogen bonds between AA R groups hold enzymes in their precise 3D shape
    • Increase in pH means more hydrogen ions will interact with R groups, which prevent R groups from interacting with each other
    • More hydrogen ions present, the less the R groups can interact with each other and bonds break
    • therefore the shape of the active site changes and enzymes are no longer complementary to the substrate