Enzyme Action - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Enzyme Action

Description:

This means that each enzyme can only act on one particular substrate ... Optimum conditions are the conditions at which an enzymes works best ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:194
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: angelaq150
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Enzyme Action


1
Enzyme Action

2
Catalysts
  • Catalysts lower the energy input (activation
    energy) needed for a chemical reaction.

Catalysed reaction
3
Enzymes
  • Living cells contain biological catalysts which
    speed up the reactions by lowering the energy
    input required.
  • Biological catalysts are called enzymes.
  • Enzymes are made of protein and are found in all
    living cells.

4
Enzymes, substrates products
  • All the reactions which take place in cells are
    controlled by enzymes
  • But each biological reaction has its own
    specific enzyme
  • The substance an enzyme acts on is called its
    substrate
  • The substances produced are called products

5
Enzymes, Substrates and Products
  • Enzyme controlled reactions by enzymes can be
    summarised in the following way.

product(s) enzyme
substrate enzyme
enzyme-substrate complex
6
Enzyme Controlled Reactions
  • The substrate is changed into the product and is
    no longer present at the end of the reaction.
  • The enzyme is present at the start of the
    reaction and is still present at the end of the
    reaction i.e. the enzyme has not changed.

7
The Specificity of Enzymes for Their Substrates
  • An enzyme is specific to its substrate.
  • This means that each enzyme can only act on one
    particular substrate
  • e.g. the enzyme amylase will break down starch
    but not protein.

8
The Lock and Key Mechanism
  • The lock and key mechanism shows how enzymes work
    and why they are specific.

9
The Lock Key
  • The enzyme is the key - it has a specific shape
    that only fits one type of lock
  • The substrate is the lock - when it reacts with
    the enzyme it is changed
  • After the reaction the enzyme remains unchanged
    and can then carry out more reactions

10
Lock key mechanism- enzymes
  • Within the structure of an enzyme are areas
    called active sites.
  • The shape of the active sites fit only one
    substrate.
  • This is what makes each enzyme specific.

Complementary shapes
11
Lock key mechanism- enzymes
  • The enzyme and its substrate fit together to form
    a complex in the same way as a key fits a lock
  • The enzyme is complementary in shape to its
    substrate

12
Lock key mechanism- enzymes
  • The substrate has been changed.
  • Products are formed.
  • The enzyme has not been changed which means that
    it can be used again.

13
Enzymes
  • Enzymes catalyse two types of reactions
  • Degradation (Breakdown) - large molecules are
    broken down into smaller, simpler molecules
  • Synthesis - small molecules are built up into
    larger, more complex molecules

14
Degradation (Breakdown) reaction
Amylase
Substrate
Product
15
Breakdown of hydrogen peroxide In
living cells
  • Hydrogen peroxide oxygen water

Catalase
16
Synthesis reaction
Phosphorylase
Glucose-1-phosphate
Starch
substrate
product
17
Enzymes
  • Optimum conditions are the conditions at which an
    enzymes works best
  • Rate of reactions may be affected by temperature
    and pH

18
Effect of temp on enzyme activity
  • At low temperatures enzyme activity is slow.
  • B. As temperature increases enzyme activity
    increases as enzyme substrate molecules move
    about at a faster rate collide more.

B
A
19
  • Enzyme activity is at a maximum. The temperature
    at which this occurs is known as the optimum
    temperature.
  • At temperatures greater than the optimum, enzyme
    structure starts to change and loses the ability
    to fit with its substrate. The enzyme has been
    denatured.

C
D
20
  • As the temperature increases, more and more
    enzyme molecules are denatured and the reaction
    stops.

E
21
Temperature
  • At higher temperatures the bonds which determine
    the shape of the enzymes active site are broken
  • This permanently changes the shape of the active
    site
  • The enzyme no longer fits the substrate and a
    reaction cannot occur
  • The enzyme has been denatured

22
pH enzyme activity
  • Enzymes are active over a narrow range of pH
    values.
  • Within each range there will be a pH value at
    which the enzyme is most active. This is the
    optimum pH of that enzyme.

23
  • This enzyme will be active over the range pH 6 to
    pH 8.
  • The optimum pH of this enzyme is pH 7.

24
Effect of pH on enzyme activity
  • Different enzymes work within different ranges.
  • Most enzymes work best in a narrow range around
    neutral pH 7.
  • Some enzymes work best near the extremes of pH
    e.g. pepsin works best in a narrow range around
    pH 2. in stomach.
  • pH values below or above the optimum can cause
    the bonds which determine the shape of the
    enzymes active site to be broken. This causes the
    enzyme to change shape i.e to be denatured

25
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com