Войдите в систему

The use of enzymes by humans dates to 7000 BCE. Humans first used enzymes to ferment sugars and produce alcohol without knowing that this was an enzyme-catalyzed reaction. Wilhelm Kuhne coined the term 'enzyme' in 1877 from the Greek words ‘en’ meaning ‘in’ or ‘within’ and ‘zyme’ meaning ‘yeast.’

Most enzymes are proteins that speed up biochemical reactions without being consumed. Enzymes contain one or more active sites that bind the substrates and convert them into products. Many enzymes also have allosteric sites, additional sites where molecules other than substrates bind to activate or inhibit the enzyme.

Some enzymes require the presence of cofactors– metal ions or organic molecules for catalysis. Cofactors bind to the active site of an enzyme and assist in the conversion of substrates into products. An enzyme without a cofactor is an apoenzyme and becomes a holoenzyme once it binds a cofactor. A cofactor that is an organic molecule is called a coenzyme. Most coenzymes are vitamin-derived.

Inhibitors are molecules that stop an enzyme-catalyzed reaction. Competitive inhibitors are similar to substrate molecules and compete with them to bind to the active sites. In contrast, non-competitive inhibitors bind to allosteric sites and change the enzyme conformation to reduce substrate binding.

Теги
EnzymeCatalysisActive SiteCofactorCoenzymeInhibitorCompetitive InhibitorNon competitive InhibitorHoloenzymeApoenzymeBiochemical Reaction

Из главы 3:

article

Now Playing

3.11 : Introduction to Enzymes

Energy and Catalysis

16.4K Просмотры

article

3.1 : The First Law of Thermodynamics

Energy and Catalysis

5.2K Просмотры

article

3.2 : The Second Law of Thermodynamics

Energy and Catalysis

4.8K Просмотры

article

3.3 : Enthalpy within the Cell

Energy and Catalysis

5.5K Просмотры

article

3.4 : Entropy within the Cell

Energy and Catalysis

10.1K Просмотры

article

3.5 : An Introduction to Free Energy

Energy and Catalysis

7.9K Просмотры

article

3.6 : Endergonic and Exergonic Reactions in the Cell

Energy and Catalysis

13.9K Просмотры

article

3.7 : The Equilibrium Binding Constant and Binding Strength

Energy and Catalysis

8.9K Просмотры

article

3.8 : Free Energy and Equilibrium

Energy and Catalysis

5.9K Просмотры

article

3.9 : Non-equilibrium in the Cell

Energy and Catalysis

4.0K Просмотры

article

3.10 : Oxidation and Reduction of Organic Molecules

Energy and Catalysis

5.6K Просмотры

article

3.12 : Enzymes and Activation Energy

Energy and Catalysis

11.1K Просмотры

article

3.13 : Introduction to Enzyme Kinetics

Energy and Catalysis

19.2K Просмотры

article

3.14 : Turnover Number and Catalytic Efficiency

Energy and Catalysis

9.6K Просмотры

article

3.15 : Catalytically Perfect Enzymes

Energy and Catalysis

3.8K Просмотры

See More

JoVE Logo

Исследования

Образование

О JoVE

Авторские права © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Все права защищены