BSCI-2520 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Reaction Rate Constant, Activation Energy

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Enzymes are types of catalysts that: increase reaction rates, enable regulation, and allow high reaction specificity. Bind to active sites based on shape (can be induced bc of how binding energy changes enzyme) or chemical properties, based on side chains. Enzymes lower the activation energy by making transition state more stable, difference in energy is g, equilibrium does not change rate is based on concentration of reactants x rate constant, (inc. [], inc. rate) Using the michaelis-menten equation, you can see that as km increases, enzyme"s affinity for substrate decreases: km = 0. 5 vmax = kd + . 0 in mm: assumptions: p + e formation is irreversible, [s] is in excess, and [es] is constant. Can also use lineweaver-burk plot to find km and vmax. %1 on y axis, and on x axis: x-intercept = -

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