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3.2.1 What are Action Molecules? Enzyme • Enzymes are proteins that act as catalysts and help complex reactions occur everywhere in life. • Catalyst- a substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction without itself undergoing any permanent chemical change • Examples: enzymes in saliva & intestines to help breakdown food Substrate • A substrate is a molecule upon which an enzyme acts. • The substrate bonds with the enzyme active site, and an enzymesubstrate complex is formed. Why are Enzymes Important? • Enzymes control the speed of chemical reactions in your body. • Without enzymes, reactions would be too slow to keep you alive. • Catabolic enzymes: enzymes break down large molecules into smaller ones. – Ex: pepsin in stomach • Anabolic enzymes: use small molecules to build up large complex ones. – Ex: enzymes that make DNA • Enzymes also help cells to communicate with each other, keeping cell growth, life and death under control. How are Enzymes Named? • Enzymes are commonly named by adding a suffix "ase" to the root name of the substrate molecule it is acting upon. • For example, Lipase catalyzes the hydrolysis of a lipid triglyceride. • Sucrase catalyzes the hydrolysis of sucrose into glucose and fructose. • lactase – breaks down lactose (milk sugars) • diastase – digests vegetable starch • sucrase – digests complex sugars and starches • maltase – digests disaccharides to monosaccharides (malt sugars) • glucoamylase – breaks down starch to glucose • protease – breaks down proteins found in meats, nuts, eggs, and cheese • lipase – breaks down fats found in most dairy products, nuts, oils, and meat • cellulase – breaks down cellulose, plant fibre; not found in humans Where are Enzymes Made? • Enzymes are made from amino acids, and they are proteins. • When an enzyme is formed in a ribosome, it is made by stringing together between 100 and 1,000 amino acids in a very specific and unique order. • The chain of amino acids then folds into a unique shape. • That shape allows the enzyme to carry out specific chemical reactions -- an enzyme acts as a very efficient catalyst for a specific chemical reaction. • The enzyme speeds that reaction up tremendously. Lock & Key Model of Enzyme Action • In this analogy, the lock is the enzyme and the key is the substrate. • Only the correctly sized key (substrate) fits into the key hole (active site) of the lock (enzyme). Induced Fit Model of Enzyme Action • When an enzyme binds to the appropriate substrate, subtle changes in the active site occur. • This alteration of the active site is known as an induced fit. • Induced fit enhances catalysis, as the enzyme converts substrate to product. • Release of the products restores the enzyme to its original form. • The enzyme can repeat this reaction over and over, as long as substrate molecules are present. Active Sites • In biology, the active site is a small port in an enzyme where substrate molecules bind and undergo a chemical reaction. • This chemical reaction occurs when a substrate collides with and slots into the active site of an enzyme. Co-Enzymes • Coenzymes are small molecules. • They cannot by themselves catalyze a reaction but they can help enzymes to do so. • In technical terms, coenzymes are organic nonprotein molecules that bind with the protein molecule to form the active enzyme. Co-Enzyme Examples • Thiamine Pyrophosphate – found in Vitamin B, meat, leafy green vegetables – Function: used when glucose is converted to ATP • Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) – found in vitamin B, milk, meat – Function: reactions in mitochondria (Energy) • Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) – found in vitamin Niacin, meat, leafy green vegetables – Function: carries hydrogen during energy production Factors that Affect Enzyme ActivityTemperature Factors that Affect Enzyme Activity- pH Factors that Affect Enzyme ActivitySubstrate Concentration