Enzymes

Cards (17)

  • Digestive enzymes
    Convert food into small, soluble molecules that can then be absorbed into the bloodstream
  • Digestive enzymes
    • Carbohydrases
    • Proteases
    • Lipases
  • Carbohydrases
    Break down carbohydrates into simple sugars
  • Products of digestion can be used to build new carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins
  • Some of the glucose produced is used in respiration
  • Sites of production of digestive enzymes
    • Salivary glands
    • Pancreas
    • Stomach
    • Small intestine
  • Digestive enzymes
    • Amylase
    • Proteases
    • Lipases
  • Amylase
    Breaks down starch into maltose (a simple sugar)
  • Proteases
    Break down proteins into amino acids
  • Lipases
    Break down lipids into fatty acids and glycerol
  • Effect of pH on enzymes
    • Different enzymes have different optimum pH values
    • Allows enzymes to be adapted to work well in environments with different pH values
    • Parts of the digestive system greatly differ in pH
  • Protease in stomach acid
    • Optimum pH is low
  • Amylase in neutral saliva
    • Optimum pH is neutral
  • As temperature increases
    Rate of enzyme reaction increases
  • Optimum temperature

    • This is when the reaction works as fast as possible
  • At extremes of pH or very high temperatures, the shape of an enzyme's active site can change</b>
  • When the shape of the enzyme's active site is changed, the substrate no longer fits and the enzyme cannot catalyse the reaction - the enzyme has been denatured