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Biochem Day 6: Enzymes Part 2

Biochem Day 6: Enzymes Part 2

Assessment

Presentation

Science

9th - 12th Grade

Practice Problem

Medium

NGSS
HS-ESS2-2, HS-ESS3-1, HS-ESS2-4

+16

Standards-aligned

Created by

Rachael Stark

Used 17+ times

FREE Resource

14 Slides • 8 Questions

1

EQ: How can we alter Enzyme Activity?

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2

Multiple Choice

An enzyme is made of what kind of monomer?

1

Nucleic Acid

2

Peptides

3

Amino Acids

4

Monosaccharides

3

Dropdown

Complete the sentence with the BEST answers: Enzymes​ ​
Chemical Reactions because they are ​

4

Multiple Choice

Enzymes in

1

Ase

2

Ose

3

Ide

4

Ite

5

Fill in the Blank

What do enzymes do to speed up chemical reactions?

6

Dropdown

The ​
of a protein determines its ​
. This is why each enzyme can only act on ONE substrate

7

8

Notes: What factors effect enzymes?

Only 3 you need to know about:

  1. Temperature

  2. pH ( Acid/Base)

  3. Concentration (Enzyme or Substrate)

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9

Notes: What is enzyme denaturation?

The shape of an enzyme is critical for its effectiveness as a catalyst.
Some environmental conditions can alter the shape of the enzyme, and this is called denaturation.
Two environmental conditions that can denature an enzyme are temperature & pH

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10

Notes: How to read Enzyme graphs

Graph 1—The effect of Temperature Change on Enzyme Action

As temperature increases, the substrate and the enzyme molecules move more quickly, collide more often, and the rate of the reaction increases. The system reaches its optimum (best) temperature for enzyme activity. As the temperature increase above the optimum, the enzyme denatures (changes shape) and will no longer fit with the substrate. The reaction rate decreases

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Notes: How to read Enzyme graphs

Graph 2—The effect of pH Change on Enzyme Action

pH
is a measure of how acidic or basic a substance is. The system reaches its optimum (best) pH for enzyme activity. As the pH increases or decreased from the optimum, the enzyme denatures (changes shape) and will no longer fit with the substrate. The reaction rate decreases

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Notes: How to read Enzyme graphs

Graph 3—The effect of Concentration on Enzyme Action

As more substrate is added to a mixture of enzyme and substrate, the reaction rate increases at first; but then levels off when all of the enzyme has been used up/is occupied with substrate. This is called the Point of Saturation. Adding more substrate after that point does not affect reaction rate.

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18

Fill in the Blank

What happens to the reaction rate as substrate is added at first?

19

Labelling

The diagram inside the graph represents what is happening in the graph.  

Label the enzyme and the substrate

Drag labels to their correct position on the image

Substrate

Enzyme

20

Multiple Choice

Question image

Why does the graph level off?

1

All enzymes have been turned into products

2

The enzymes ran out of substrate because they reached the Point of Saturation

3

All products have been made so the reaction stops

4

All enzymes are occupied with substrate so the reaction cannot go any faster

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Exit Ticket: On your Whiteboards

  1. Explain what is occurring when a mixture of enzyme and substrate reach the saturation point. Include a graph in your answer

  2. Describe why an enzyme increases its reaction rate as temperature increases

  3. What happens to an enzyme when it is exposed to high heat or different pH’s? What does this mean?

  4. An Enzyme is an example of a ___________________________ and it is made of monomers called _____________________________.

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EQ: How can we alter Enzyme Activity?

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