Created by Charlotte Hewson
over 9 years ago
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Question | Answer |
what is the type of enzyme called where it makes a temporary attachment to the active site? | reversible inhibitors |
what are the two types of reversible inhibitor? | competitive and non-competitive |
where to competitive inhibitors bind? | to the active site of the enzyme |
where do non-competitive inhibitors bind? | to the enzyme at a position other than the active site |
what is the inhibitors shape? | molecular shape similar to that of the substrate |
what does this alllow them to do? | occupy the active site |
what do they compete with?what for? | they compete with the substrate for the available active sites |
what determines the effect this has on enzyme activity? | the difference between the concentration of the inhibitor and the concentration of the substrate |
what happens if substrate concentrations are increased? | effect of the inhibitor is reduced |
what is an example of competitive inhibition in a respiritory enzyme? | Malonic acid inhibits the enzyme because it has a very similar shap to succinic acid. Blocks succinic acid combining with enzymes active site |
what happens when a non-competitive inhibitor binds to the enzyme? | the inhibitor alters the shape of the enzymes active site so substrate molecules can no longer fit so enzyme cant function |
what effect does increasing the concentration of the substrate do? | no effect as the substrate and the inhibitor aren't competing for the same site |
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