BSC 1010 Chapter Notes - Chapter 6: Allosteric Regulation, Enzyme Inhibitor, Dephosphorylation

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26 Aug 2020
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Irreversible inhibitors bind enzymes covalently and cause permanent loss of catalytic activity (generally toxic to cells: e. g. : heavy metal ions, nerve gas poisons, some insecticides. Reversible inhibitors bind enzymes noncovalently and can dissociate from the enzyme (e. + i ei: competitive or non-competitive. Competitive inhibitors bind to the enzymes active site: compete with the substrate. Non-competitive inhibitors do not bind to the active site: pure non-competitive inhibitors do not change the affinity of an enzyme for its substrate. Regulation that depends on interactions of substrates and products with an enzyme is called substrate-level regulation: substrate levels increased reaction rates, product levels lower rates. Other mechanisms of enzyme regulation: allosteric regulation and covalent modification. In feedback inhibition, the final product of an enzyme pathway negatively regulates an earlier step in the pathway. Allosteric enzymes have two conformations: bind allosteric effector at regulatory site (allosteric site, activator or inhibitor.

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