BIOB34H3 Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Reaction Rate, Enzyme, Phosphorylation

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31 Aug 2016
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Chapter 2: molecules and cells in animal physiology part 2. Enzyme-catalyzed reactions exhibit saturation kinetics because the reaction velocity is limited by the availability of enzyme molecules at high substrate concentrations. The maximal reaction velocity (vmax) that prevails at saturation depends on properties 1 and 2: the amount and catalytic effectiveness of the enzyme. Property 3, the enzyme substrate affinity, determines how closely the reaction velocity approaches the maximal velocity when (as is typical in cells) substrate concentrations are subsaturating. The enzyme substrate affinity is measured by the half-saturation constant (i. e. , the michaelis constant, km, for enzymes displaying hyperbolic kinetics). A ligand is any molecule that selectively binds by noncovalent bonds to a structurally and chemically complementary site on a specific protein. Multisubunit enzymes often exhibit cooperativity, a phenomenon in which the binding of certain binding sites to their ligands affects (positively or negatively) the binding of other binding sites to their ligands.

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