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Biology unit 1.4
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Caitlyn parry
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Cards (130)
What is the role of enzymes in metabolic reactions?
Biological
catalysts that speed up
reactions
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What happens in reactions where larger molecules are broken down by enzymes?
Larger molecules become
smaller molecules
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What happens in reactions where smaller molecules are built up into larger, more complex, molecules by enzymes?
Smaller molecules become
larger
molecules
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What is the molecule that an enzyme reacts with called?
A
substrate
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What is the specific area on an enzyme where substrate molecules bind?
The
active site
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What two things are combined together to form an enzyme?
Protein
and
core
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What kind of enzymes build larger products from smaller substrate molecules?
Anabolic
enzymes
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What kind of enzymes break large substrate molecules into smaller products?
Catabolic
enzymes
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In the reaction enzyme + substrate = enzyme-substrate complex = enzyme-product complex = enzyme + product, what does the enzyme do?
The enzyme is
released
unchanged
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Where is the enzyme lysozyme found?
Tears
and
other
secretions
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What is the function of lysozyme?
To destroy
pathogenic
bacteria
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How does lysozyme destroy bacterial cell walls?
By breaking
glycosidic
bonds
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What is the bacterial cell wall made of?
Polysaccharide
of
amino sugars
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How many amino sugars long is the section of polysaccharide that fits into the groove on lysozyme?
Six
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What types of bonds hold the substrate in place in the lysozyme molecule?
Hydrogen
and
ionic
bonds
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What type of reaction is the breakdown of polysaccharide by lysozyme?
Catabolic
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What is the relationship between the shape of the substrate and the active site of the enzyme?
Complementary
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According to collision theory, what must occur for molecules to react?
Molecules
must
collide
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According to collision theory, what must a collision have to produce a reaction?
Enough
energy
and correct
orientation
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What determines the rate of reaction, according to collision theory?
Rate of
successful collisions
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What is the energy required for a successful collision called?
Activation energy
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According to the induced fit model, what does the enzyme do to accommodate the substrate?
Changes
shape
slightly
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According to the induced fit model, what does the enzyme change do to the substrate molecule?
Places a
strain
and
distorts
it
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According to the induced fit model, what does distortion of a bond do to the activation energy?
Lowers
it
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How does distorting the substrate molecule affect its potential energy?
Reduces
its
potential
energy
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After the reaction occurs, what happens to the products in relation to the active site?
They
no longer bind to it
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What does it mean for an enzyme to be specific?
Catalyzes only one
reaction
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What is a key feature of enzymes regarding their activity?
They are very
efficient
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What do enzymes do to the activation energy of a reaction in the body?
Lower
it
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How do enzymes allow reactions to take place in the body?
At lower
temperatures
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In an enzyme-controlled reaction, how can the reaction's progress be followed?
By measuring
product
or
substrate
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In an enzyme-controlled reaction, when are there a large number of substrate molecules available?
When
enzyme
and
substrate
are
mixed
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During an enzyme-controlled reaction, what comes into contact with the empty active sites of the enzyme?
Substrate molecules
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During an enzyme-controlled reaction, what happens when all active sites become filled?
They rapidly break down to
products
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How does the amount of substrate change as an enzyme-controlled reaction proceeds?
It
decreases
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How does the amount of product change as an enzyme-controlled reaction proceeds?
It increases
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Why does the graph of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction flatten out in due course?
All
substrate
has been used up
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What are three factors that can affect enzyme activity?
Temperature
Substrate concentration
Enzyme concentration
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How does an increase in temperature affect the kinetic energy of molecules in an enzyme-controlled reaction?
It increases it
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What does increased kinetic energy lead to in an enzyme-controlled reaction?
More successful
collisions
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