Topic 7

Enzymes

Biological catalysts — proteins that dramatically speed up chemical reactions in living cells without being permanently changed or consumed in the process.

A. Properties of Enzymes

Key Properties

  • Biological catalysts: Speed up reactions by lowering activation energy — the enzyme itself is not consumed
  • Protein in nature: Made of amino acids folded into a precise 3D shape (except ribozymes, which are RNA-based)
  • Highly specific: Each enzyme acts on only one substrate — determined by the unique shape of its active site
  • Reusable: Released unchanged after catalysis — can act on many substrate molecules
  • Temperature sensitive: Activity rises to an optimum (~37°C in humans) then falls sharply as the enzyme denatures
  • pH sensitive: Each enzyme has an optimum pH; extreme pH causes denaturation
  • Denaturation is permanent: The active site's shape is irreversibly destroyed — the enzyme cannot recover
⚡ Key distinction Inhibition is reversible; denaturation is permanent. Above ~40°C human enzymes denature. Pepsin (pH 2) denatures in alkaline conditions. Amylase (pH 7) denatures in strong acid.

B. Models of Enzyme Action

Lock & Key vs Induced Fit

ModelProposed ByDescriptionAccepted?
Lock and Key Emil Fischer (1894) Active site is a rigid, fixed shape — substrate fits exactly like a key into a lock. Explains specificity but not flexibility. Partially — explains specificity
Induced Fit Daniel Koshland (1958) Active site is flexible — it changes shape slightly to mould around the substrate when it binds, like a glove around a hand. More accurate. ✅ Currently accepted model
⚡ MCQ Tip Fischer (1894) = Lock & Key = rigid active site. Koshland (1958) = Induced Fit = flexible active site. Induced Fit is the currently accepted model.

C. Factors Affecting Enzyme Activity

Factor Summary

FactorEffectExtreme effect
Temperature↑ temp → ↑ activity (more collisions) up to optimum ~37°CAbove optimum → denaturation (permanent)
pHEach enzyme has its own optimum pHExtreme pH → denaturation
Substrate concentration↑ substrate → ↑ rate until all active sites are occupied (saturation)Rate plateaus at saturation — adding more substrate has no effect
Enzyme concentration↑ enzyme → ↑ rate (more active sites)Limited by substrate availability
Competitive inhibitorSimilar shape to substrate — blocks active site temporarilyReversible — overcome by adding more substrate
Non-competitive inhibitorBinds elsewhere (allosteric site) → distorts active site shapeOften irreversible — cannot be overcome by adding substrate
Temperature
Effect↑ temp → ↑ activity (more collisions) up to optimum ~37°C
Extreme effectAbove optimum → denaturation (permanent)
pH
EffectEach enzyme has its own optimum pH
Extreme effectExtreme pH → denaturation
Substrate concentration
Effect↑ substrate → ↑ rate until all active sites are occupied (saturation)
Extreme effectRate plateaus at saturation — adding more substrate has no effect
Enzyme concentration
Effect↑ enzyme → ↑ rate (more active sites)
Extreme effectLimited by substrate availability
Competitive inhibitor
EffectSimilar shape to substrate — blocks active site temporarily
Extreme effectReversible — overcome by adding more substrate
Non-competitive inhibitor
EffectBinds elsewhere (allosteric site) → distorts active site shape
Extreme effectOften irreversible — cannot be overcome by adding substrate

D. Important Enzymes to Know

Key Enzymes, Locations & Optimum pH

EnzymeLocationReactionOptimum pH
AmylaseSaliva & PancreasStarch → MaltosepH 7 (neutral)
PepsinStomachProteins → PeptidespH 2 (strongly acidic)
LipasePancreas, Small intestineFats → Fatty acids + GlycerolpH 7–8
TrypsinPancreas (acts in small intestine)Proteins → Smaller peptidespH 8 (slightly alkaline)
LactaseSmall intestineLactose → Glucose + GalactosepH 6–7
CatalaseMost cells (especially liver)Hydrogen peroxide → Water + OxygenpH 7
DNA PolymeraseNucleusSynthesises new DNA strands during replicationpH 7–8
Amylase
LocationSaliva & Pancreas
ReactionStarch → Maltose
Optimum pHpH 7 (neutral)
Pepsin
LocationStomach
ReactionProteins → Peptides
Optimum pHpH 2 (strongly acidic)
Lipase
LocationPancreas, Small intestine
ReactionFats → Fatty acids + Glycerol
Optimum pHpH 7–8
Trypsin
LocationPancreas (acts in small intestine)
ReactionProteins → Smaller peptides
Optimum pHpH 8 (slightly alkaline)
Lactase
LocationSmall intestine
ReactionLactose → Glucose + Galactose
Optimum pHpH 6–7
Catalase
LocationMost cells (especially liver)
ReactionHydrogen peroxide → Water + Oxygen
Optimum pHpH 7
DNA Polymerase
LocationNucleus
ReactionSynthesises new DNA strands during replication
Optimum pHpH 7–8
⚡ MCQ Tip Pepsin = pH 2 (most acidic — stomach). Trypsin = pH 8 (alkaline — pancreas/small intestine). Amylase = pH 7 (saliva). Catalase in LIVER cells breaks down toxic H₂O₂.

Quick MCQ Revision

FactAnswer
Optimum temp for human enzymes37°C (body temperature)
Optimum pH for pepsinpH 2 (stomach — strongly acidic)
Optimum pH for amylasepH 7 (saliva — neutral)
Optimum pH for trypsinpH 8 (pancreas — slightly alkaline)
Lock & Key modelEmil Fischer, 1894 — rigid active site
Induced Fit modelDaniel Koshland, 1958 — flexible active site (accepted)
DenaturationPermanent loss of enzyme shape — caused by high temp or extreme pH
Competitive inhibitorBlocks active site — reversible, overcome by more substrate
Catalase substrateHydrogen peroxide → Water + Oxygen (found in liver)
Amylase substrateStarch → Maltose (saliva & pancreas)
Key