01:119:115 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Oxidative Phosphorylation, Activation Energy, Glycolysis

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Enzymes are catalytic proteins most enzyme names end in ase. A catalyst is a chemical agent that speeds up a reaction without being consumed by the reaction. Enzymes speed up metabolic reactions by lowering activation energy barriers. Every chemical reaction molecules involves bond breaking and bond forming. The initial energy needed to start a chemical reaction is the free energy of activation or activation energy (ea) Fig 8. 14 enzymes catalyze reactions by lowering the ea barrier. Enzymes do not affect the change in free energy g but speed up the reactions that would occur eventually. Enzymes are very specific for the reactions that they catalyze, allows only a certain amount of atoms. Enzyme substrate complex only accept certain type of reactants. The active site can lower ea barrier by: Straining substrate bonds- flex bonds to make then weaker, ultimately break bonds. Substrates are held together in active site by weak interactions.

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