BCH2011 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Reaction Coordinate, Activation Energy, Reaction Intermediate

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With the exception of a small group of catalytic rna molecules, all enzymes are proteins. Their catalytic activity depends on the integrity of their native protein conformation. If an enzyme is denatured or dissociated into its subunits, catalytic activity is usually lost. If an enzyme is broken down into its component amino acids, its catalytic activity is always destroyed. Thus the primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures of protein enzymes are essential to their catalytic activity. The enzymatic catalysis of reactions is essential to living systems. Under biologically relevant conditions, uncatalysed reactions tend to be slow most biological molecules are quite stable in the neutral ph, mild-temperature, aqueus environment inside cells. Many common chemical processes are unfavorable or unlikely in the cellular environment, such as the transient formation of unstable charged intermediates or the collision of two or more molecules in the precise orientation required for reaction.

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