Enzymes
Enzymes
Enzymes
Enzymes
Mode of action of enzymes
Enzymes as Proteins
Enzyme: a protein produced by a living organism that acts as a biological
catalyst in a chemical reaction by reducing activation energy
Enzymes are biological catalysts
o ‘Biological’ because they function in living systems
o ‘Catalysts’ because they speed up the rate of chemical reactions without being used up or
changed
Enzymes are also globular proteins, they fold up into precise shapes.
Critical to the enzyme’s function is the active site where the substrate binds
Metabolic pathways are controlled by enzymes in a biochemical cascade of
reactions
o Virtually every metabolic reaction within living organisms is catalysed by an enzyme –
enzymes are therefore essential for life to exist
Many enzyme names end in –ase; for example, amylase and ATPase
Enzymes can be intracellular or extracellular referring to whether they are
active inside or outside the cell respectively
Intracellular enzymes are produced and function inside the cell
Extracellular enzymes are secreted by cells and catalyse
reactions outside cells (eg. digestive enzymes in the gut)
Don’t forget that enzymes are proteins and so anything that could denature a
protein, rendering it non-operational (extremes of heat, temperature, pH etc.)
would also denature an enzyme.
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The active site of an enzyme has a specific shape to fit a specific substrate (when the
substrate binds an enzyme-substrate complex is formed)
The specificity of an enzyme is a result of the complementary nature between
the shape of the active site on the enzyme and its substrate(s)
The shape of the active site (and therefore the specificity of the enzyme) is
determined by the complex tertiary structure of the protein that makes up the
enzyme:
o Proteins are formed from chains of amino acids held together by peptide bonds
o The order of amino acids determines the shape of an enzyme
o If the order is altered, the resulting three-dimensional shape changes
An example of enzyme specificity – the enzyme catalase can bind to its substrate hydrogen
peroxide as they are complementary in shape, whereas DNA polymerase is not
An enzyme-substrate complex forms when an enzyme and its substrate join
together
The enzyme-substrate complex is only formed temporarily, before the
enzyme catalyses the reaction and the product(s) are released
A catabolic reaction
An anabolic reaction
Experimental set-up for investigating the rate of formation of a product using catalase
Experimental set-up for investigating the rate of disappearance of a substrate using amylase
Temperature
Enzymes have a specific optimum temperature – the temperature at which
they catalyse a reaction at the maximum rate
Lower temperatures either prevent reactions from proceeding or slow them
down:
o Molecules move relatively slow
o Lower frequency of successful collisions between substrate molecules and active site of
enzyme
o Less frequent enzyme-substrate complex formation
o Substrate and enzyme collide with less (kinetic) energy, making it less likely for bonds to be
formed or broken (stopping the reaction from occurring)
Higher temperatures speed up reactions:
o Molecules move more quickly
o Higher frequency successful collisions between substrate molecules and active site of
enzyme
o More frequent enzyme-substrate complex formation
o Substrate and enzyme collide with more (kinetic) energy, making it more likely for bonds to
be formed or broken (allowing the reaction to occur)
However, as temperatures continue to increase, the rate at which an enzyme
catalyses a reaction drops sharply, as the enzyme begins to denature:
o Bonds (eg. hydrogen bonds) holding the enzyme molecule in its precise shape start to break
o This causes the tertiary structure of the protein (ie. the enzyme) to change
o This permanently damages the active site, preventing the substrate from binding
o Denaturation occurs if the substrate can no longer bind
o Very few human enzymes can function at temperatures above 50°C
This is because humans maintain a body temperature of about 37°C, therefore even
temperatures exceeding 40°C will cause the denaturation of enzymes
High temperatures causes the hydrogen bonds between amino acids to break, changing the
conformation of the enzyme
pH
The pH is a measure of the concentration of hydrogen ions.
All enzymes have an optimum pH or a pH at which they operate best
Enzymes are denatured at extremes of pH
o Hydrogen and ionic bonds hold the tertiary structure of the protein (ie. the enzyme) together
o Below and above the optimum pH of an enzyme, solutions with an excess of H+ ions (acidic
solutions) and OH– ions (alkaline solutions) can cause these bonds to break
o This alters the shape of the active site, which means enzyme-substrate complexes form less
easily
o Eventually, enzyme-substrate complexes can no longer form at all
o At this point, complete denaturation of the enzyme has occurred
Where an enzyme functions can be an indicator of its optimal environment:
o Eg. pepsin is found in the stomach, an acidic environment at pH 2 (due to the presence
of hydrochloric acid in the stomach’s gastric juice)
o Pepsin’s optimum pH, not surprisingly, is pH 2
The effect of pH on the rate of an enzyme-catalysed reaction for three different enzymes
(each with a different optimum pH)
When investigating the effect of pH on the rate of an enzyme-catalysed
reaction, you can use buffer solutions to measure the rate of reaction
at different pH values:
o Buffer solutions each have a specific pH
o Buffer solutions maintain this specific pH, even if the reaction taking place would otherwise
cause the pH of the reaction mixture to change
o A measured volume of the buffer solution is added to the reaction mixture
o This same volume (of each buffer solution being used) should be added for each pH value
that is being investigated
Note: Temperature can both affect the speed at which molecules are moving
(and therefore the number of collisions between enzyme and substrate in a
given time) and can denature enzymes (at high temperatures). pH, however,
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does not affect collision rate but only disrupts the ability of the substrate to
bind with the enzyme, reducing the number of successful collisions until
eventually, the active site changes shape so much that no more successful
collisions can occur.
Enzyme Concentration
Enzyme concentration affects the rate of reaction
The higher the enzyme concentration in a reaction mixture, the greater the
number of active sites available and the greater the likelihood of enzyme-
substrate complex formation
As long as there is sufficient substrate available, the initial rate of
reaction increases linearly with enzyme concentration
If the amount of substrate is limited, at a certain point any further increase in
enzyme concentration will not increase the reaction rate as the amount of
substrate becomes a limiting factor
Substrate Concentration
The greater the substrate concentration, the higher the rate of reaction:
o As the number of substrate molecules increases, the likelihood of enzyme-substrate complex
formation increases
o If the enzyme concentration remains fixed but the amount of substrate is increased past a
certain point, however, all available active sites eventually become saturated and any further
increase in substrate concentration will not increase the reaction rate
o When the active sites of the enzymes are all full, any substrate molecules that are added
have nowhere to bind in order to form an enzyme-substrate complex
For this reason, in the graph below there is a linear increase in reaction rate as
substrate is added, which then plateaus when all active sites become
occupied
Inhibitor Concentration
There are two types of inhibitors:
o Competitive inhibitors have a similar shape to that of the substrate molecules and
therefore compete with the substrate for the active site
o Non-competitive inhibitors bind to the enzyme at an alternative site, which alters the shape
of the active site and therefore prevents the substrate from binding to it
Both types of inhibitors slow down or stop enzyme activity
Increasing the concentration of an inhibitor, therefore, reduces the rate of
reaction and eventually, if inhibitor concentration continues to be increased,
the reaction will stop completely
For competitive inhibitors, countering the increase in inhibitor concentration
by increasing the substrate concentration can increase the rate of reaction
once more (more substrate molecules mean they are more likely to collide
with enzymes and form enzyme-substrate complexes)
For non-competitive inhibitors, increasing the substrate concentration cannot
increase the rate of reaction once more, as the shape of the active site of the
enzyme remains changed and enzyme-substrate complexes are still unable to
form
A graph showing the effect of substrate concentration on initial reaction rate, with
Vmax, ½Vmaxand Km values shown
End-product inhibition
A and C both have the same Vmax but at different time. They have different Km;
Higher Km when (competitive) Inhibitors are present.
A and B have different Vmax but same Km