Enzymes are also globular proteins
Due to this specificity, thousands of enzymes are needed throughout an organism, to carry out individual chemical reactions
Some enzymes have two substrates that must each collide with a separate active site at the same time
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)
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
The temporary formation of an enzyme-substrate complex
Enzyme reactions can either be catabolic or anabolic
A catabolic reaction
An anabolic reaction
Don't forget that both enzymes and their substrates are highly specific to each other – this is known as enzyme-substrate specificity.
Higher temperatures speed up reactions:
However, as temperatures continue to increase, the rate at which an enzyme catalyses a reaction drops sharply, as the enzyme begins to denature
The effect of temperature on the rate of an enzyme-catalysed reaction
Changes in pH
Water has a pH of 7, regarded as neutral
The effect of pH on three enzymes' rates of reaction
Changes in substrate concentration
The effect of substrate concentration on enzyme activity
When answering questions about reaction rates for enzyme-catalysed reactions, make sure to explain how the temperature affects the speed at which the molecules (enzymes and substrates) are moving and how this, in turn, affects the number of successful collisions.You should memorise the sketch graphs of temperature, pH and substrate concentration and be able to sketch new curves for changed conditions.
Exam Tip
Don't forget that enzymes are always proteins and so anything that could denature a protein, rendering it non-operational (extremes of heat, temperature, pH etc.) would also denature an enzyme.Avoid using the term 'destroyed' when describing the disruption to enzyme structure; the more accurate term is 'denatured'.
转载自savemyexams
© 2024. All Rights Reserved. 沪ICP备2023009024号-1