6.2 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions pages 156-160.

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6.2 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions pages 156-160

Transcript of 6.2 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions pages 156-160.

Page 1: 6.2 Enzymes and Chemical Reactions pages 156-160.

6.2 Enzymes and Chemical

Reactionspages 156-160

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• Chemical reactions take place all the time.• Chemical reactions change substances

into different ones by breaking and forming chemical bonds.

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• Reactants are the starting materials.• The newly formed substances are called

products, which are different from the reactants.

• Reactants on the left, Products on right.For example:

6CO2 +6H2O+light energyC6H12O6 + 6O2

Reactants

Products

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• The key to starting a chemical reaction is energy.

• Activation energy is the minimum amount of energy needed for reactants to form products in a chemical reaction.

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Enzymes in Chemical Reactions

• Sometimes, the energy required for a reaction to take place is too high.

• The reaction can’t take place unless additional substances are present to reduce the activation energy.

• These substance are known as enzymes, which serve as catalysts.

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Catalysts are substances that speed up chemical reactions by decreasing activation energy.

A catalyst lowers activation energy

Enzymes are catalysts

Most reactions would occur too slowly without the help of enzymes, which speed up chemical reactions.

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Substrates bind to anenzyme at certain places

called active sites.

The enzyme bringssubstrates together and

weakens their bonds.

The catalyzed reaction formsa product that is released

from the enzyme.

- Substrates are brought together.- They attach to the active site of enzymes.- Bonds are then made or broken.- Product is released.

The lock-and-key model helps illustrate how enzymes function.

• Enzymes are SPECIFIC (they break down only one thing) *They will only FIT with certain substrates*

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‘Lock and Key Model’ – says there is a perfect fit between

active site and substrate

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VOCABULARY

• Enzymes – biological catalysts or special proteins that speed up chemical reactions

• Catalysts – substances that speed up chemical reactions)

• Substrates – materials that bind to the enzyme

• Active Site - Location on the enzyme where the substrate binds

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An Enzyme at WorkReactant

ProductsEnzyme-SubstrateComplex

Active site

Unchanged enzyme

Substrate

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How an enzyme affects a chemical reation:

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How do enzymes speed up reactions?

• Enzymes lower the activation energy of a reaction:

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Factors that Affect Enzyme Activity

1. TEMPERATURE- Too warm, enzyme will denature.- Too cold, enzymatic activity will slow down.

2. pH

- a change in pH can change the shape of the enzyme so that substrates can’t fit into active site.

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3. What is the optimum temperature for the enzyme?

4. At what temperature is the enzyme completely denatured?

1. What is this graph showing?

2. What is the independent variable?

62°C

40°C

temperature and enzyme activity

temperature

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• If you did not complete lab. Do that FIRST!• Enzyme worksheet• Pg 160 1 and 4• Pg 175-176: 1,2,4,7,14-23