Chapter 5 // Pt2: Enzymes and Membranes
Required for metabolism
Reactions that would otherwise take decades can be done in the cell in seconds
Speeds up reactions - catalysis
Not changed during reaction - reusable
Most enzymes are proteins
Enzyme interaction w/ molecules
Active Site - on enzymes where catalysis occurs
Substrates - on molecules that match active site
Enzymes target specific molecules
Induced fit model - Active Site and Substrate don’t fit perfectly until reaction starts
Enzymes can be influenced by environment
pH, temperature, salt concentration, can alter enzyme’s shape
Work best in specific conditions
denaturation
Metabolic Pathways
Linked series of enzymatic reactions
One triggers a reaction, triggers the next reaction, so forth.
Millions of molecules
Linear Metabolic Pathways
Ex: Glycolysis in cellular respiration
Cyclic Metabolic Pathways
Ex: Krebs cycle in cellular respiration
Pathways controlled by enzyme inhibitors
Feedback inhibition - molecules block enzyme active sites
Stops enzymes from rapidly making products in reactions
How do cells safely break bonds to get energy?
Glucose bonds can combust if all energy is released at once
Electron transfer chain: series of enzymes and molecules that transfer electrons as glucose bonds are broken one by one
Lose energy as electron is transferred = more stability
Cofactors
Small molecules that help enzymes
Bonds to active site or allosteric site
Can denature enzymes if removed
Ex: vitamins, metals, and minerals
Coenzymes
Organic cofactors
Carry chemical groups, atoms, and elements to different reactions throughout the cell
Unlike enzymes these don’t get modified in reactions so they must be regenerated
Coenzyme ATP
Coenzymes can be multifunctional = ATP
Phosphorylation - donates phosphate group to enzyme which donates to reaction
Phosphate bonds hold lots of energy (triphosphate)
ATP/ADP Cycle (phosphorylation)
Phosphorylation forms ADP (diphosphate) when enzyme takes a phosphate group from an ATP coenzyme
Reactions constantly need ATP to run
Get ATP from glucose in food (charged battery)
Lose phosphate to phosphorylation (dead battery)
Need more glucose from food to charge battery again
Cell membranes made from lipid bilayer
Other molecules embedded in membrane
Fluid mosaic model - move around freely within membrane bilayer
Proteins in Membranes
Proteins provide different functions to membranes
Integral proteins - permanent proteins found in membranes
Peripheral proteins - temporary proteins found in membranes
Four different types of proteins found in membranes with different functions
Adhesion Proteins
Fasten cell’s membranes together
Helps adhering and tight junctions
Signals info about cell’s position to other cells
Ex: animal tissues
Receptor Proteins
Trigger change in cellular activity in response to stimuli
Hormone binds to it to tell info and receptor proteins tell the cell how to respond (metabolize, move, divide, or cell death)
Ex: immune system
Enzymes in Membranes
Catalyzes reactions at membrane
Transport Proteins
Transports substances across lipid bilayer
Molecules bind to one side of transport protein and releases it on other side of membrane (could be in or out of cell)
Moving Substances across membranes
Metabolic pathways need molecules to participate across cell membranes and other cells
Diffusion - spontaneous spreading of molecules or atoms through a fluid or gas
A difference in gradients triggers diffusion
5 factors that influence diffusion
Concentration
Substances travel from areas with a high concentration to areas with a low concentration
Helps with overcrowding of molecules
Temperature
Atoms and molecules vibrate faster at higher temperatures
Move quicker = diffuse quicker
Charge
Opposite charges attract
Positively charged ions will move to areas with a negative charge, vice versa
Molecular Size
Larger molecules harder to diffuse
Smaller molecules diffuse quicker
Pressure
High pressure squeezes atoms and molecules together
More crowded
More likely to go somewhere less crowded and with less pressure
Faster diffusion at higher pressures
Moving Water Across Membranes
Osmosis - the movement of fluid across membranes
Hypertonic - when water moves out of the cell, shrivels
Hypotonic - when water moves in the cell, expands
Isotonic - equal sharing of water inside and out, ideal
Moving Substances Across Cell Walls
Turgor - the water pressure that gives plant cell their structure
Keeps cell membrane pushed against cell wall
Moves high to low
Transport proteins used when diffusion is not possible
Some molecules can’t diffuse on their own (ex. glucose)
2 types of transport protein used
Passive Transport
Using transport proteins
Requires no input, happens naturally
Ex: osmosis, facilitated diffusion (gradient differences in concentrations)
Active Transport
Using transport proteins
Requires energy to move across membrane (ex. ATP)
Goes against gradient differences
Ex. sodium-potassium pump
(Moves sodium ions out of cell and potassium ions into the cell)
Membrane Trafficking using vesicles
Vesicles = cell taxis
Carry materials to and from cell membrane
2 types of vesicle movements
Exocytosis
Vesicle moves to membrane and fuses with it
Contents of vesicle released outside the cell during fusion
Endocytosis
Membrane encloses group of materials and takes them in
Releases content inside the cell
Pinocytosis - endocytosis of liquids and sometimes small molecules
Phagocytosis - endocytosis of large molecules
Required for metabolism
Reactions that would otherwise take decades can be done in the cell in seconds
Speeds up reactions - catalysis
Not changed during reaction - reusable
Most enzymes are proteins
Enzyme interaction w/ molecules
Active Site - on enzymes where catalysis occurs
Substrates - on molecules that match active site
Enzymes target specific molecules
Induced fit model - Active Site and Substrate don’t fit perfectly until reaction starts
Enzymes can be influenced by environment
pH, temperature, salt concentration, can alter enzyme’s shape
Work best in specific conditions
denaturation
Metabolic Pathways
Linked series of enzymatic reactions
One triggers a reaction, triggers the next reaction, so forth.
Millions of molecules
Linear Metabolic Pathways
Ex: Glycolysis in cellular respiration
Cyclic Metabolic Pathways
Ex: Krebs cycle in cellular respiration
Pathways controlled by enzyme inhibitors
Feedback inhibition - molecules block enzyme active sites
Stops enzymes from rapidly making products in reactions
How do cells safely break bonds to get energy?
Glucose bonds can combust if all energy is released at once
Electron transfer chain: series of enzymes and molecules that transfer electrons as glucose bonds are broken one by one
Lose energy as electron is transferred = more stability
Cofactors
Small molecules that help enzymes
Bonds to active site or allosteric site
Can denature enzymes if removed
Ex: vitamins, metals, and minerals
Coenzymes
Organic cofactors
Carry chemical groups, atoms, and elements to different reactions throughout the cell
Unlike enzymes these don’t get modified in reactions so they must be regenerated
Coenzyme ATP
Coenzymes can be multifunctional = ATP
Phosphorylation - donates phosphate group to enzyme which donates to reaction
Phosphate bonds hold lots of energy (triphosphate)
ATP/ADP Cycle (phosphorylation)
Phosphorylation forms ADP (diphosphate) when enzyme takes a phosphate group from an ATP coenzyme
Reactions constantly need ATP to run
Get ATP from glucose in food (charged battery)
Lose phosphate to phosphorylation (dead battery)
Need more glucose from food to charge battery again
Cell membranes made from lipid bilayer
Other molecules embedded in membrane
Fluid mosaic model - move around freely within membrane bilayer
Proteins in Membranes
Proteins provide different functions to membranes
Integral proteins - permanent proteins found in membranes
Peripheral proteins - temporary proteins found in membranes
Four different types of proteins found in membranes with different functions
Adhesion Proteins
Fasten cell’s membranes together
Helps adhering and tight junctions
Signals info about cell’s position to other cells
Ex: animal tissues
Receptor Proteins
Trigger change in cellular activity in response to stimuli
Hormone binds to it to tell info and receptor proteins tell the cell how to respond (metabolize, move, divide, or cell death)
Ex: immune system
Enzymes in Membranes
Catalyzes reactions at membrane
Transport Proteins
Transports substances across lipid bilayer
Molecules bind to one side of transport protein and releases it on other side of membrane (could be in or out of cell)
Moving Substances across membranes
Metabolic pathways need molecules to participate across cell membranes and other cells
Diffusion - spontaneous spreading of molecules or atoms through a fluid or gas
A difference in gradients triggers diffusion
5 factors that influence diffusion
Concentration
Substances travel from areas with a high concentration to areas with a low concentration
Helps with overcrowding of molecules
Temperature
Atoms and molecules vibrate faster at higher temperatures
Move quicker = diffuse quicker
Charge
Opposite charges attract
Positively charged ions will move to areas with a negative charge, vice versa
Molecular Size
Larger molecules harder to diffuse
Smaller molecules diffuse quicker
Pressure
High pressure squeezes atoms and molecules together
More crowded
More likely to go somewhere less crowded and with less pressure
Faster diffusion at higher pressures
Moving Water Across Membranes
Osmosis - the movement of fluid across membranes
Hypertonic - when water moves out of the cell, shrivels
Hypotonic - when water moves in the cell, expands
Isotonic - equal sharing of water inside and out, ideal
Moving Substances Across Cell Walls
Turgor - the water pressure that gives plant cell their structure
Keeps cell membrane pushed against cell wall
Moves high to low
Transport proteins used when diffusion is not possible
Some molecules can’t diffuse on their own (ex. glucose)
2 types of transport protein used
Passive Transport
Using transport proteins
Requires no input, happens naturally
Ex: osmosis, facilitated diffusion (gradient differences in concentrations)
Active Transport
Using transport proteins
Requires energy to move across membrane (ex. ATP)
Goes against gradient differences
Ex. sodium-potassium pump
(Moves sodium ions out of cell and potassium ions into the cell)
Membrane Trafficking using vesicles
Vesicles = cell taxis
Carry materials to and from cell membrane
2 types of vesicle movements
Exocytosis
Vesicle moves to membrane and fuses with it
Contents of vesicle released outside the cell during fusion
Endocytosis
Membrane encloses group of materials and takes them in
Releases content inside the cell
Pinocytosis - endocytosis of liquids and sometimes small molecules
Phagocytosis - endocytosis of large molecules