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Your praxis Biology test prep center
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Energy, ATP, and Enzymes

Posted By: Admin on January 6, 2010 in Biology Lecture- Review - Comments: No Comments »

Energy – the ability to do work, that is, to move matter against opposing forces such as gravity and friction

  • kinetic energy - the energy of motion.
  • potential energy – stored energy, the capacity to do work

Thermodynamics – the study of energy transformation

  • The First Law of Thermodynamics - Energy can be transferred and transformed, but it can neither be created nor destroyed
    • The total energy of the universe is constant
    • Mass is a form of energy (this is only important when considering atomic reactions, so we won’t dwell on it here…)

  • The Second Law of Thermodynamics - Every energy transfer or transformation increases the entropy of the universe
    • There is a trend toward randomness
    • Energy must be spent to retain order – this spending of energy usually releases heat, which increases the entropy elsewhere

Free Energy – the portion of a system’s energy the can perform work

  • It is called “free” energy because this is the energy which can perform work, not because there is no energy cost to the system
  • There still ain’t no free lunch

Exergonic Reaction – a process with a net release of free energy

  • Sometimes called spontaneous, but that doesn’t mean that it will occur rapidly
  • Burning paper is exergonic, but paper just doesn’t ignite when it is exposed to air – it requires an initial input of energy to start the reaction

Endergonic Reaction – a process which absorbs free energy from the surroundings

  • Most synthesis reactions are endergonic

Energy Coupling – the use of an exergonic process to drive and endergonic process

  • The free energy released from the exergonic process is absorbed by the endergonic process

Types of Cellular Work

  • Mechanical – beating of cilia, muscle contractions, etc.
  • Transport – pumping of molecules and ions across a plasma membrane against their concentration gradient, etc.
  • Chemical – pushing endergonic reactions that would not occur spontaneously

Useful and much more detailed links


ATP – Power To Drive Cellular Work

ATP – Adenosine triphosphate – a close relative to Adenine, a nucleotide found in DNA.

  • Contains three phosphate groups connected to each other in sequence
  • The bonds an be broken by hydrolysis
    • When the terminal phosphate bond is broken, a molecule of inorganic phosphate (Pi)  is formed
    • This forms adenosine diphosphate, ADP + (Pi)
    • This generates free energy, which can be used by the cell to do work
  • Usually, ATP functions by transferring its phosphate group to another molecule, creating a phosphorylated intermediate.
    • This phosphorylated intermediate is usually less stable (more reactive) than the original molecule, which drives the reaction
  • Obviously, for the cell to function, ATP must rapidly be regenerated.
    • One muscle cell can consume and regenerate over 10,000,000 ATP’s a second
    • If ATP couldn’t be regenerated, humans would have to consume nearly their body weight in ATP each day

Enzymes and Chemical Reactions

Catalyst -  a chemical agent that changes the state of a reaction without being consumed in the reaction
Substrate – reactants
Intermediates – compounds formed between initial reactants & products
Products – products
Cofactors- helpers for enzymes (carry e-)
Energy Carriers – sources of quick energy (ATP)

Enzymes are protein catalysts

  • Actually, some RNA molecules possess enzymatic functions, but well over 99% of all enzymes are proteins
  • they do not do the impossible – they only speed up reactions
  • they are not consumed in a reaction
  • they work for both the forward and the reverse reaction
  • they are highly selective

How Energy Relates to Reactions

  • Initial state transition state final state must overcome an energy barrier


Any reaction requires some energy to overcome the activation energy barrier

  • An enzyme lowers this energy barrier, thus speeding up the reaction

  • An enzyme has an active site which holds the reactants in a particular way to facilitate the bonding/bond breaking
  • Note: it lowers the activation energy for the forward and the reverse (but not in a proportionate way)
  • Lock and Key Hypothesis – there is only one active site which precisely fits the reactants (more or less)

Enzymes are Substrate Specific

  • The enzyme binds to the substrate or substrate when there are two or more reactants
  • While bound, the catalytic action of the enzyme converts the substrate(s) to product(s)
  • An enzyme can distinguish its substrate from similar molecules and even isomers of the same molecule
  • Only a restricted region of the enzyme molecule actually binds to the substrate – this is called the active site
    • This match is not perfect – as the enzyme and substrate come together, a small conformation change occurs so that the active site fits even more snugly around the substrate
    • This is know as an induced fit.  Think of a handshake – as your hands come together, your fingers move to more tightly grasp the other hand.
  • When the enzyme and substrate come together, they form an enzyme-stubstate complex
    • Held together by hydrogen and/or ionic bonds

The Catalytic Cycle of an Enzyme

  • The enzyme and the substrate form the enzyme-substrate complex
  • R-groups of the amino acids comprising the active site catalyze the reaction
    • They often pull or contort the substrate, temporarily weakening bonds or some configuration
    • In reactions with two or more substrates, they can form a template to guide the substrates into the most energy-efficient configuration
    • The active site may also provide a microenvironment more conducible to the reaction, such as providing a pocket of low pH in an otherwise neutral cell
  • The rate of enzyme action is proportional to the concentration of the substrate (more substrate, the faster the reaction rate)
    • However, saturation can occur

A Cell’s Physical and Chemical Environment Affect Enzyme Activity

  • An enzyme’s function is dependent upon its shape, so environmental conditions which affect shape will affect the catalytic properties of the enzyme
  • Temperature – a measure of molecular motion
    • For most chemical reactions, as temperature increases, reaction rate will increase
      • More molecules will possess enough energy to cross the activation energy barrier
    • However, as temperature increases, the molecular motion of the enzyme also increases
      • The enzyme’s active site may become unstable and function poorly
      • Once a certain temperature is reached, bonds maintaining the 2o, 3o, and 4o structure of the protein collapse and the protein loses function
      • When a protein falls apart like this, it is called a denatured protein
    • There is usually a temperature at which the enzyme exhibits peak performance.  This is known as the temperature optimum for this enzyme.
    • The temperature optimum for each enzyme is usually related to the environment in which it will operate
      • A DNA polymerase for a human would have a lower temperature optimum than that of a hot springs bacteria

  • pH – a measure of [H+] – acidic and basic conditions
    • Like temperature, most enzymes have a pH at which they perform at peak efficiency – the pH optimum
    • Also like temperature, the pH optimum is related to the conditions in which it will be found
    • At extreme pH’s, the enzyme may denature

  • Cofactors - a non-protein enzyme helper
    • aid in enzyme catalytic function
    • may be bound tightly to the active site or may be loosely bound
    • may be inorganic, such as a zinc or copper ion, or it may be an organic molecule
      • if organic, it is commonly called a coenzyme

      most vitamins are coenzymes or provide raw materials for the construction of coenzymes, so take your vitamins!

  • Enzyme Inhibitors – chemicals which interfere with enzyme function
    • Can be reversible (if hydrogen or ionic bonded) or more-or-less permanent (if covalently bonded to enzyme)
    • Some molecules can fit into the active site and may compete for admission into the active site.  These are known as competitive inhibitors.
    • Other molecules may bind to the enzyme and cause an conformation change which affect the ability of the enzyme to bind to the substrate.  These are known as noncompetitive inhibitors
    • In cells inhibition usually reversible; that is the inhibitor isn’t permanently bound to the enzyme. 
    • Irreversible inhibition of enzymes also occurs, due to the presence of a poison.
      • Penicillin cause the death of bacteria due to irreversible inhibition of an enzyme needed to form the bacterial cell wall.
      • In humans, hydrogen cyanide irreversibly bind to a very important enzyme (cytochrome oxidase) present in all cells, and this accounts for its lethal effect on the body.
  • Enzyme Enhancers – chemicals which increase enzyme function
    • Like noncompetitive inhibitors, enzyme enhancers can bind to a non-active site and cause a conformation change which enhances enzyme function

The Control of Metabolism In many cases, the molecules that naturally regulate enzyme activity behave like reversible noncompetitive inhibitors

  • Alter enzyme’s shape and function by binding to an allosteric site
  • Allosteric site – receptor site on some part of the enzyme remote from the active site
    • can speed up or slow down enzyme function (enhancers and noncompetitive inhibitors)
    • Example – enzymes of catabolic pathways have allosteric sites which can bind ATP and AMP
      • ATP is an inhibitor, AMP is an enhancer
      • When ATP prodction is greater than use, ATP will accumulate and then slow down or shut off the pathway
      • When ATP production lags behind use, AMP will accumulate and enhance the pathway, creating more ATP
  • Feedback Inhibition – when the product of a pathway acts as an inhibitor of the pathway
    • Prevents too much buildup of product
    • The reaction series converting theronine to isoleucine is a classic example of allosteric regulation. 
    • Five enzymes acting in sequence catalyze the pathway. 
    • The final product of the sequence, isoleucine, acts as an inhibitor of the first enzyme of the pathway, threonine deaminase. 

      • As the pathway produces isoleucine, any molecules made in excess of cell requirements combine reversibly with threonine deaminase at a location outside the active site. 
      • The combination converts threonine deaminase to the T state and inhibits its ability to combine with threonine. 
      • The pathway is then turned off. 
      • If the concentration of isoleucine later falls as a result of its use in cell synthesis, isoleucine releases from the threonine deaminase enzymes, converting them to the R state in which they have high affinity of the substrate, conversion of threonine to isoleucine takes place.

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