QUESTION IMAGE
Question
how enzymes work
in the diagrams below do the following:
- label the active site of the enzyme
- label and colour the enzyme blue
- label and colour the substrate red
- label and colour the product green
key ideas
words to use
complex low product biological thousands
active site complementary activation
unchanged specific catalyse substrate
1
diagram 1
enzymes are known as ________ catalysts. the enzyme has an ______ which the substrate molecule is able to fit into. the substrate molecule is said to have a ______ shape to the enzymes active site. enzymes are said to be ______ to just one ________ for this reason.
2
diagram 2
when the substrate and enzyme molecules temporarily combine it is known as an enzyme - substrate ________. as the enzyme holds the substrate molecule in a certain way it puts tension on the substrate molecule. this lowers the ______ energy needed for the reaction to take place. this is why reactions can occur at relatively ________ temperatures in living things.
3
diagram 3
during the reaction the substrate is turned into ________. this is released from the enzymes active site and the enzyme molecule is left ______ and free to ______ more reactions. each reaction in our body involves a specific enzyme. we have ________ of different enzymes in our body.
To solve the fill - in - the - blanks about enzyme work, we use the knowledge of enzyme function:
For the first paragraph (about enzyme basics):
- Enzymes are biological catalysts as they work in living organisms.
- Enzymes have an active site where the substrate fits.
- The substrate has a complementary shape to the enzyme's active site.
- Enzymes are specific to just one substrate (lock - and - key or induced - fit model).
For the second paragraph (enzyme - substrate complex and activation energy):
- When substrate and enzyme combine, it's an enzyme - substrate complex.
- Enzymes lower the activation energy of the reaction.
- This allows reactions to occur at relatively low temperatures in living things.
For the third paragraph (product formation and enzyme reuse):
- During the reaction, the substrate is turned into product(s).
- The enzyme molecule is left unchanged after the reaction.
- The enzyme is free to catalyse more reactions.
- Our body has thousands of different enzymes.
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- Enzymes are known as \underline{biological} catalysts. The enzyme has an \underline{active site} which the substrate molecule is able to fit into. The substrate molecule is said to have a \underline{complementary} shape to the enzyme's active site. Enzymes are said to be \underline{specific} to just one \underline{substrate} for this reason.
- When the substrate and enzyme molecules temporarily combine it is known as an enzyme - substrate \underline{complex}. As the enzyme holds the substrate molecule in a certain way it puts tension on the substrate molecule. This lowers the \underline{activation} energy needed for the reaction to take place. This is why reactions can occur at relatively \underline{low} temperatures in living things.
- During the reaction the substrate is turned into \underline{product(s)}. This is released from the enzyme's active site and the enzyme molecule is left \underline{unchanged} and free to \underline{catalyse} more reactions. Each reaction in our body involves a specific enzyme. We have \underline{thousands} of different enzymes in our body.