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Biology Unit 1
1.4 enzymes
enzyme inhibitors
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Created by
Ella Titcombe
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Cards (17)
What is an enzyme inhibitor?
Any
substance
that
decreases
enzyme
activity
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What are the two types of enzyme inhibitors?
Competitive
and
non-competitive
inhibitors
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How do competitive inhibitors function?
They
fit
into the
active site
instead of
substrate
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What is a key characteristic of competitive inhibitors?
They are
structurally
similar
to the
substrate
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Why should you
not
say competitive inhibitors are the same
shape
as substrates?
They have a
similar
shape, not
identical
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What happens when a competitive inhibitor collides with an enzyme?
It may
prevent
enzyme-substrate
complex
formation
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How does increasing substrate concentration affect competitive inhibition?
It
decreases
the
effect
of the
inhibitor
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What do non-competitive inhibitors bind to?
Any
part of the enzyme
except
the
active site
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What is the effect of non-competitive inhibitors on enzyme shape?
They
alter
the
overall
shape
of the enzyme
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How does increasing substrate concentration affect non-competitive inhibition?
It does
not
increase
the rate of
reaction
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How can you identify competitive and non-competitive inhibition on a graph?
Curve A:
Competitive
inhibition (
increased
substrate
reduces
effect)
Curve B:
Non-competitive
inhibition (substrate concentration has
no
effect)
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What does the x-axis represent in the inhibition graph?
Increasing
substrate
concentration
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What does curve A on the graph indicate?
It represents
competitive inhibition
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What does curve B on the graph indicate?
It represents
non-competitive inhibition
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Why can
only
competitive inhibition be
reduced
by
increasing
substrate concentration?
Because it
competes
for the
active site
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What is the relationship between enzyme-substrate complexes and inhibitors?
Inhibitors
prevent
successful
enzyme-substrate
complexes
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look at this graph
line A:
competitive
line B:
non-competitive
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