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- Which of the following statements about the allosteric site is true? a. The allosteric site is a second active site on a substrate in a metabolic pathway. b. The allosteric site on an enzyme can allow the product of a metabolic pathway to inhibit that enzyme and stop the pathway. c. When the allosteric site of an enzyme is occupied, the reaction is irreversible and the enzyme cannot react again. d. An allosteric activator prevents binding at the active site. e. An enzyme that possesses allosteric sites does not possess an active site.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
- 8.Choose the False statement about enzyme binding sites Binding at an allosteric site ca affect binding and catalysis at the Ortho steric site. In addition to ortho steric sites , some enzymes have other sites where catalysis can be conducted. They are called , allosteric sites, from “allo,” the other. In principle, allosteric ligands can have structures that do not resemble those of substrates. Ligand binding at an allosteric site can cause a conformational change of an enzyme. Enzyme can be inhibited by an allosteric ligand that does not complete with substrate.1. If a molecule is interating with its side chains of an enzymes active site but it is not the substrate of the enzyme what kind of enzyme regulation is this? 2. What is the change in thetype of bond between Ser 80 -> Arg. 3. Will this change cause the complex to be more or less stable. Explain5. 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 option
- 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.1. Can you describe how electrostatic and steric considerations may lead to preferential stabilization of the transition state at an enzyme active site? 2. What factors are involved in “transition-state complementarity”?1 ).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. What is the difference between the lock and key model in the induced fit model enzyme-substrate binding? 1a. What factors affect an enzymes catalytic function?1. What is the most prevalent anomeric form of glucose present in physiological systems? 2. Predict the effects of mutating Asp102 of the enzyme, trypsin, to Asn on - substrate binding: Little or no effect...because why? - catalysis: Catalysis would be much slower because the mutation disrupts to function of the catalytic triad. Asn is not charged. Are these the correct answers? Please help explain1. Consider the three-dimensional model of the tertiary structure of an enzyme below. Amino acids involved in binding are shaded blue, and amino acids involved in catalysis are shaded red. A. Suppose research has shown that amino acid 82 in the red shaded region is lysine, an amino acid with a positively-charged side chain. This lysine is critical for catalysis. Other studies have found that amino acids 12 and 62 in the blue region are both phenylalanine, an amino acid with a nonpolar side chain, and are critical for substrate binding. These amino acids are relatively close in the active site but are separated by 20-70 amino acids in the primary structure. Using what you know about protein structure, explain how amino acids separated in the primary structure can come close together in the active site. B. Use this information and figure 4.2 in your book to answer the following questions: Do you think changing amino acid 82, lysine, an amino acid with a positively-charged side…