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3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions

3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

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Page 1: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions

Page 2: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

3.6 IB Objectives

3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site.3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity3.6.3 Explain the effects of temperature, pH and substrate concentration on enzyme activity.3.6.4 Define denaturation.3.6.5 Explain the use of lactase in the production of lactose-free milk.

Page 3: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

Chemical Reactions and Enzymes

Chemical reactions in living organisms always involve the breaking of bonds in reactants and the formation of new bonds in products.

6H20 + 6CO2 + Light → C6H12O6 + 6O2

Photosynthesis

Page 4: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

The Basics

Enzymes are a type or class of protein. All proteins are made up of monomers called amino acids.

The sequence of amino acids will determine the structure (and function) of the enzyme. Enzymes have complex 3D (globular) shapes.

Enzymes act as biological catalysts by altering the rate of chemical reactions without themselves being used up. Enzymes are not considered reactants.

Enzymes can speed up metabolic reactions by a factor of 10 million

The names of enzymes tend to end in ‘ase’ (catalase, lactase, sucrase)

In some reactions, small molecules called coenzymes join with enzymes to control chemical reactions inside cells (ex. Vitamins like B and K).

Page 5: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

How Do Enzymes Influence Chemical Reactions

Metabolic Reactions: The sum total of all the chemical reactions occurring in the body.

Activation Energy: The energy required to get a reaction started

Enzymes cannot force reactions to occur that would otherwise not occur. A set of reactions in the

presence of an enzyme will form product(s) at a faster rate than those without the enzyme.

Page 6: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

The Effects of Enzymes

Page 7: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the
Page 8: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

The Enzyme-Substrate Complex(2 Models)

I. The Lock and Key Model:

Page 9: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

HYDROLYSIS REACTION

Page 10: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

DEHYDRATION SYNTHESIS REACTION

Page 11: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

II. The Induced-Fit Model

Notice the conformationalChange in the active siteOf the enzyme. The enzyme’sActive site changes to bringThe substrate(s) in Alignment.

Page 13: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

The Effects of Temperature, pH and Substrate Concentration on Enzyme Activity

A. Temperature (kinetic energy & molecular collisions):

Page 14: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

B. pH (Potential Hydrogen): pH of a solution is dependent on the relative number of

hydrogen ions (H+) compared to hydroxide ions (OH-) in the same solution.

Pure water has a neutral pH (7) with an equal number of H+ and OH- ions in solution.

pH can affect the enzyme-substrate complex (charge matching) or possibly denature the enzyme.

Page 15: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

C. Substrate Concentration

Page 16: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

Define Denaturation Denaturation, sometimes permanent, is a

structural change in a molecule caused by extreme conditions of pH, temperature, etc.

In the case of enzymes, a loss of structure results in a loss of function.

Denaturation results when intramolecular bonds are stressed and broken.

Page 17: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

THE USE OF LACTOSE IN SOLVING THE PROBLEM OF LACTOSE INTOLERANCE

Page 18: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the
Page 19: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the
Page 20: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the
Page 21: 3.6 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions. 3.6 IB Objectives 3.6.1 Define enzyme and active site. 3.6.2 Explain enzyme-substrate specificity 3.6.3 Explain the

Lactase is obtained from the fungus, Kluyveromyces lactis. Milk is treated with lactase and this breaks down the

lactose to the monosaccharides glucose and galactose (which can easily be absorbed by the small intestine).

Lactase can be immobilized and the milk passed over it. The prevents the lactase from being in the product (and can be reused).

Lactose-free milk is used in the production of ice cream as lactose crystallizes when cold and makes ice cream granular (the glucose and galactose remain dissolved in the ice cream and make it smoother.

In yogurt production, bacteria ferment lactose slowly but ferment glucose and galactose—making production faster.

Lactose is not as sweet tasting whereas glucose and galactose are. By changing lactose into these two sugars, the products are made sweeter.