Transcript ENZYMES3
ENZYMES
•Enzymes are organic compounds.
•They are made up of proteins.
•They are called organic catalysts
Catalysts speed up a reaction but are not
used up in the reaction.
Properties of Enzymes
• speed up the rate of the reaction
• lower the amount of energy required
for a chemical reaction to happen
• remain unchanged at the end of the
reaction
Enzymes either help break things
down or put them together.
They often end in “ase”
• Lactase breaks down
lactose.
• Sucrase breaks down
sucrose.
•
http://www.medbio.info/Horn/Sugars4Kids/big_a
nd_small.htm
What enzyme is a person who is
lactose intolerant missing?
www.delawarecountyirritablebowelsyndromespecialist.info
Lactase! That is why their stomach hurts.
How do enzymes work?
1. Substrate: the substance that is being broken down.
2. Active Site: The place on the enzyme that connects to the
substrate.
3. The active site of the enzyme connects to the substrate and
breaks it into the products.
Here is an example of an enzyme
breaking down food.
Enzymes in your intestines break
down your food.
www.mdconsult.com/.../0/0/10041/19823_en.jpg
What does protease break the above proteins down into?
Amino Acids
Lock and Key
•Enzymes are specific
•This means that only 1
substance, or substrate, will fit
into each enzyme.(Just like your
house key only works at your
house.)
Lock and Key
•The key to your house can open
your door many times.
•An enzyme can also be used over
and over again.
•The key has a specific place on the
door.
Several factors can affect the
speed of an enzyme
• Coenzymes:
Vitamins or
minerals that speed
up the rate of
enzymes
Inhibitors:
• Things that block an
enzyme and slow it
down
• Examples: drugs
Denaturation
– Factors that change
the shape of an
enzyme
– Examples:
Temperature and PH
Effect of heat on enzyme activity
• If you heat the protein above its optimal temperature
bonds break .
• meaning the protein loses it folded up structure
• This is called denaturing the protein. The active site
changes shape so the substrate no longer fits.
Temperature
5- 40oC
Increase in Activity
Rate of Reaction
40oC - denatures
0
<5oC - inactive
10
20
30
40
50
Temperature (degrees C)
60
This is why you feel tired when you are
sick.
If you melt your key , it
won’t open your door!
http://library.thinkquest.org/03oct/00923
/smallpox.htm
Rate of Reaction
pH
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
pH scale
For this enzyme, there are two optimal pH
ranges for the enzyme to work.
It does not work in other pHs because the
active site changes
Do humans need enzymes?
YES
Uses: Digestion
To get our body energy
Economic uses: Detergents
Many fatal genetic disorders are due to the absence
of just ONE enzyme.