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Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids
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Page 1: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids

Page 2: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Structure of a Fat

molecule

Page 3: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Proteins

Page 4: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Protein Functions

Page 5: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Proteins-1

• Proteins are made of amino acids• There are 20 different amino acids found in

living things• Amino acids have

– An amine group– A carboxyl group– Both are attached to the end carbon of a

carbon chain

Page 6: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Amino Acids

Page 7: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.
Page 8: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Connecting Amino Acids

• Dehydration synthesis reaction resulting in a polypeptide

Page 9: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Primary Structure of

a Protein

Page 10: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Secondary Structure

of a Protein

Page 11: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Tertiary Structure

of a Protein

Page 12: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Quaternary Structure of

a Protein

Page 13: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Protein Structure

Page 14: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Proteins & Evolutionary Relationships

Page 15: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Enzymes

Page 16: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Enzyme Characteristics-1• All enzymes are proteins• Most enzymes are named after their substrate

and end in –ase• Enzymes are specific- they work on only one

substrate• Enzymes must physically fit together with

their substrate- this is what makes them so specific

• Enzymes have an active site- this is where the reaction takes place

Page 17: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Enzyme reaction

Page 18: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Enzyme Characteristics

• Enzymes are denatured by high temperatures and by a pH that is too high or too low, relative to their optimal pH

• Denatured enzymes lose their shape, so they no longer fit with their substrate

Page 19: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

How Enzymes Work• Enzymes are catalysts– they speed up reactions

– They are not consumed in the reaction– They are not changed in any way at the end of the

reaction– They can work in small quantities, because they

can be used over and over– They do NOT make reactions occur that would not

occur by themselves- they merely speed them up

• Lock and Key Hypothesis• Induced Fit Hypothesis

Page 20: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.
Page 21: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Some substances can make enzymes inactive

Page 22: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Metabolic Control

• Competitive inhibitors- block the substrate from entering active sites

• Noncompetitive inhibitors- impede enzymatic reactions by binding to another part of the enzyme which causes the enzyme to change shape, making the active site unreceptive to substrate.

• Allosteric regulation- similar to reversible noncompetitive inhibitors.– Allosteric site- a receptor site on the enzyme remote from the

active site– Causes inhibition or stimulation of enzyme activity– Enzyme activity changes due to fluctuating concentrations of the

regulators.

Page 23: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Energy in reactions

• Potential energy- – stored energy– Example: Energy in the chemical bonds

• Kinetic energy– Energy of motion or work– Example: Energy used to make chemical bonds

Page 24: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Endergonic/Exergonic Reactions

Page 25: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Activation energy

Page 26: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Activation energy of

an enzymatic reaction

Page 27: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Enzyme Helpers- necessary for catalysis

• Cofactors- nonprotein helpers – May be bound tightly to the active site

– May bind loosely and reversibly along with the substrate

– Some are inorganic: zinc, iron, copper

• Coenzyme- protein helper– Most vitamins are coenzymes or

– Some vitamins are raw materials from which coenzymes are made

Page 28: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Nucleic Acids

Page 29: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Nucleic Acid Structure• Nucleic acids are made of Nucleotides

• Nucleotides are made of:– A Phosphate group– A Sugar: either ribose or deoxyribose– A Base: A, T, G, C, U

• A= adenine

• T= thymine

• G= guanine

• C= cytosine

• U= uracil

Page 30: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.
Page 31: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.
Page 32: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Nucleic Acids- DNA & RNA

• There are only two nucleic acids: – DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid– RNA: ribonucleic acid

• Functions: control cell function and heredity– DNA makes RNA– RNA makes proteins

Page 33: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Comparison of DNA and RNA StructureDNA RNA

Sugar deoxyribose Ribose

Bases ATGC AUGC

Strands DOUBLE

helix

Single

helix

Page 34: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Structure of one strand of

a DNA molecule

Page 35: Proteins, Enzymes and Nucleic Acids. Structure of a Fat molecule.

Structure of DNA