QUESTION IMAGE
Question
section 1.4 - enzymes review
matching definitions:
- the temperature or ph at which an enzyme works best.
- the location where a substrate binds to an enzyme.
- the name for substances that use enzymes.
- the enzyme and substrate model.
- a biological catalyst that speeds up reactions.
- the energy needed for a reaction to take place.
- another name for an enzyme.
- when an enzyme loses its ability to work.
- when water is lost in the formation of a polymer.
- when water is added in the breaking down of a polymer.
yes or no:
- is an enzyme used up during a reaction?
- would cells be able to metabolize quick enough without enzymes?
- do reaction rates speed up with enzymes?
- is water added to a polymer during hydrolysis?
- can a substrate bind to an enzyme that does not have a matching active site?
- is a catalyst also called an enzyme?
- based upon the name, would polymerase be an enzyme?
- is water lost during dehydration?
- would a denatured enzyme be able to catalyze reactions?
interpreting graphs:
- what is the optimum temperature of the enzyme?
- at what temperatures is the enzyme denatured?
- would the enzyme still catalyze at the temperature of 78°f? if so, how would the reaction rate differ from the optimum?
Brief Explanations
- The temperature or pH at which an enzyme works best is called the optimum.
- The location where a substrate binds to an enzyme is the active - site.
- Substances that use enzymes are substrates.
- The enzyme and substrate model is lock and key.
- A biological catalyst that speeds up reactions is an enzyme.
- The energy needed for a reaction to take place is activation energy.
- Another name for an enzyme is catalyst.
- When an enzyme loses its ability to work, it is denatured.
- When water is lost in the formation of a polymer, it is dehydration.
- When water is added in the breaking down of a polymer, it is hydrolysis.
For yes - or - no questions:
- Enzymes are not used up during a reaction, so no.
- Cells would not be able to metabolize quickly enough without enzymes, so no.
- Reaction rates speed up with enzymes, so yes.
- Water is added to a polymer during hydrolysis, so yes.
- A substrate cannot bind to an enzyme that does not have a matching active site, so no.
- Not all catalysts are enzymes, so no.
- Polymerase is an enzyme based on naming convention (enzymes often end in - ase), so yes.
- Water is lost during dehydration, so yes.
- A denatured enzyme cannot catalyze reactions, so no.
For graph - interpreting questions:
- The optimum temperature is the temperature at which the reaction rate is highest. From the graph, it is around 85°F.
- The enzyme is denatured at temperatures where the reaction rate drops significantly. From the graph, it seems to be above 90°F and below 75°F.
- At 78°F, the enzyme would still catalyze. The reaction rate at 78°F is lower than the optimum (at 85°F) as the reaction - rate curve is lower at 78°F compared to 85°F.
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Matching definitions:
- I. Optimum
- A. Active site
- F. Substrates
- C. Lock and Key
- E. Enzyme
- B. Activation energy
- H. Catalyst
- J. Denatured
- D. Dehydration
- G. Hydrolysis
Yes or no:
- No
- No
- Yes
- Yes
- No
- No
- Yes
- Yes
- No
Interpreting graphs:
- Around 85°F
- Above 90°F and below 75°F
- Yes, the reaction rate is lower than at the optimum.