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Enzymes. Energetics. First Law of Thermodynamics – energy cannot be created or destroyed, it can only change forms . Second Law of Thermodynamics – (potential energy transformation into heat or other random molecular motion) Entropy (disorder) is continuously increasing.
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Energetics • First Law of Thermodynamics – energy cannot be created or destroyed, it can only change forms
Second Law of Thermodynamics – (potential energy transformation into heat or other random molecular motion) Entropy (disorder) is continuously increasing
Catabolism – metabolic reactions that result in the breakdown of complex molecules into simple compounds, usually with the release of energy • Anabolism – Those chemical reactions involved in biosynthesis, usually requires the input of energy
Free Energy • The amount of energy available to make or break chemical bonds (the amount of energy available to do work)
Endergonic reactions – those chemical reactions that require an input of energy and do not proceed spontaneously. • productscontain more free energythan the reactants
Exergonic reactions – those chemical reactions that proceed spontaneously • products contain less free energy than the reactants; energy is given off as heat. • Most require an input of energy to get started (activation energy)
The amount of activation energy can be lowered using catalysts (substances that lower the amount of activation energy by stressing chemical bonds) • Ex: enzymes
Enzymes • Enzymes (biological catalysts) are very specific types of functional proteins. • Act as catalysts in biological systems (help mediate chemical activity)
Enzymes are “substrate specific”; one enzyme for each type of substrate • Enzymes end in “ase” • Enzymes are reusable
Enzymes work by lowering the activation energy needed for chemical reactions to occur • Enzymes have an active site to which the substrate bonds forming the “enzyme-substrate complex. Any change in this site will render the enzyme inactive
Operate in a very narrow pH, temperature and ionic range. • varies from enzyme to enzyme; ex: enzymes in stomach vs. enzymes in blood; enzymes of the bacteria in thermal vents of Pacific vs. most other bacterial enzymes
Factors Affecting Enzyme Activity: • Temperature: Optimum vs. Denaturation • pH • Salinity
Inhibitors • Competitive: a substance that competes with the substrate for the same binding site. Ex: isopropyl and ethyl alcohol
Noncompetitive: substance that binds to an alternative site (allosteric site) on the enzyme, changing its shape, and preventing it from binding to the substrate
Allosteric inhibitors – act as “on/off” switches; bind to allosteric site and reduce enzyme activity • Allosteric activators – bind to allosteric site and increase enzyme activity by keeping enzyme active
Cofactors – minerals that aid enzyme activity • Coenzmye – nonprotein, organic molecule that aids enzyme activity; vitamins
Feedback Inhibition • Final product in a biochemical pathway becomes an allosteric effector on one of the molecules in the pathway and stops the process. • Ex: glucose and insulin