2. Enzyme Oxidase A catalyzes a bisubstrate reaction where one of its substrates is a colored molecule. Biochemical Name Species Substrates Products M N X Y Color Red Colorless Colorless Colorless A group of researchers has determined that M is always the first substrate to bind to the enzyme. Now your job is to ascertain the mechanism of the bisubstrate reaction. Set up a hypothetical experiment and explain logically what would you expect if the enzyme catalyzed i) a single displacement reaction or ii) a double displacement reaction.
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- Which of the following statements about inhibition is true? a. Allosteric inhibitors and allosteric activators are competitive for a given enzyme. b. If an inhibitor binds the active site, it is considered noncompetitive. c. If an inhibitor binds to a site other than the active site, this competitive inhibition. d. A noncompetitive inhibitor is believed to change the shape of the enzyme, making its active site inoperable. e. Competitive inhibition is usually not reversible.In an enzymatic reaction: a. the enzyme leaves the reaction chemically unchanged. b. if the enzyme molecules approach maximal rate, and the substrate is continually increased, the rate of the reaction does not reach saturation. c. in the stomach, enzymes would have an optimal activity at a neutral pH. d. increasing temperature above the optimal value slows the reaction rate. e. the least important level of organization for an enzyme is its tertiary structure.Which of the following methods is not used by enzymes to increase the rate of reactions? a. covalent bonding with the substrate at their active site b. bringing reacting molecules into close prosimity c. orienting reactants into positions to favor transition states d. changing charges on reactants to hasten their reactivity e. increasing fit of enzyme and substrate that reduces the energy of activation
- 1. The concentration of substrate X is high. What happens to the rate of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction if the concentration of substrate X is reduced? Explain. 2. An enzyme has an optimum pH of 7.2. What is most likely to happen to the activity of the enzyme if the pH drops to 6.2? Explain1. There are two major categories of enzyme, inhibition, name, and describe them.  1a. Reverse inhibition can be overcome to allow the enzyme to resume is Catley activities. Describe how reversible inhibition can occur and how it can be over come.1. Demonstrate your understanding whether carrier-free biocatalysts should or should not be considered as good biocatalysts. You discussion must be in detail and related to biocatalysis. You can provide detail explanation or provide example. 2. Compare and contrast the following pairs of terms. Relate their similarities and differences to applications in biocatalysis. Zymonomas sp. and Saccharomyces sp.
- 1.The class of enzyme that catalyzes addition of a group to a double bond is? oxidoreductases lyases ligases isomerases hydrolases transferases 2. Suppose an enzyme and its substrate obey the lock and key model of enzyme catalysis. Which of the following would be true of the enzyme? the active site of the enzyme must be rigid the active site of the enzyme must be flexible only one substrate could be converted to product by the enzyme the enzyme could bind different substrates if the substrates shared a common motif somewhere in their structures the entire enzyme must be rigid 3. Which of the following enzymes is found in blood serum and is diagnostic of prostate cancer if enzyme levels are elevated? alanine aminotransferase phosphohexose isomerase lactate dehydrogenase acid phosphatase alkaline phosphatase 4. A blood test returns elevated aspartate aminotransferase levels. You suspect that the patient has suffered a heart attack. What other serum enzyme level of…5. Which of the following statements is/are correct regarding allosteric regulation?a) Allosteric effector controls the activity of an enzyme by irreversible binding.b) Allosteric effector binds to the regulatory sitec) Allosteric activator causes changes in the catalytic site enhancing the substrate binding.d) Allosteric inhibitor causes changes in the catalytic site decreasing the substrate binding. explain each option1 ).Which of the following accurately describes substrate specificity for serine proteases? A.The binding cleft B.Mg2+ metal activated enzyme C.The catalytic triad D.Facilitates redox chemistry E.Stabilizes the transition state 2). Which of the following amino acid residues would not provide a side chain for acid-base catalysis at physiological pH? select all that apply leucine aspartic acid histidine lysine Please answer both correct i will give u upvote.
- 1. Make a Lineweaver-Burk plot and use the plot to complete the information in the table and the following questions. a. Is it possible for the enzyme to overcome the effect of the inhibitor in question from the chart. Explain. b. What prevents this enzyme from being an even more catalytically efficient enzyme? c. What do single molecule data indicate about the validity of ensemble data?d. What is the reason that humans are insensitive to sulfa drugs?1. A. Estimate from the graph what the Vmax is for the enzyme without inhibitor present (black circles) and in the presence of the inhibitor (green squares). B. Estimate the Km from the graph without inhibitor present (black circles) and in the presence of the inhibitor (green squares). C. Based on the data, what type of reversible inhibitor do you think was used? Explain your answer.5) Consider the hypothetical biochemical pathway shown below. Assume that each letter (A, B, C, etc) represents a molecule and each number over an arrow (1, 2, 3, etc) represents an enzyme that catalyzes that reaction (so enzyme 2 catalyzes the conversion of B to C). Indicate all the probable feedback inhibition interactions that would be expected to regulate the activity of enzymes in this pathway. please indicate each interaction in the format example: "X will inhibit enzyme 27".