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Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Catalysts And Enzymes
Upon addition of a catalyst, which of the following are expected to happen to a catalytic reaction?
I. The amount of products produced will increase
II. The amount of reactant molecules reaching the activation energy will increase
III. The rate constant of the reaction will increase
II and III
I and III
III only
I only
II and III
Catalysts are added to a reaction to decrease the activation energy. This will allow for reactants to easily overcome the energy barrier (activation energy) and carry out the reaction; therefore, the reaction will happen quicker and the rate of reaction will increase. Recall that the rate constant quantifies the rate of a reaction. Since rate of reaction and rate constant are directly proportional, addition of catalyst will lower the activation energy, increase the rate of reaction, and, subsequently, increase the rate constant.
It’s important to remember that catalysts only alter the rate of a reaction (speeds up the reaction). They have no effect on thermodynamics/equilibrium (the amount of products produced).
Example Question #2 : Catalysts And Enzymes
Which of the following molecules will increase the speed of a biological reaction?
Histones
More than one of these
DNAase
ATP
DNAase
The speed of a reaction is increased when the amount of reactants reaching the activation energy (energy barrier) is increased. This can be done via two ways: increasing temperature or adding a catalyst. Increasing temperature will add kinetic energy to the reactant and increase the amount of reactants reaching the energy barrier. Adding a catalyst will decrease the activation energy and, subsequently, increase the amount of reactants reaching the energy barrier.
Since the temperature is kept relatively constant in the human body (due to homeostasis), the most common way human body increases the speed of a reaction is by using catalysts. Biological catalysts are called enzymes and they are usually named with the suffix -ase. The only molecule that is an enzyme in this question is DNAase, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphodiester bonds in the backbone of DNA.
ATP provides energy for active reactions but it cannot speed up the reaction. Histones are proteins found in nucleus that are involved in DNA packaging. They are irrelevant to this question.
Example Question #13 : Reaction Kinetics
Which of the following parameters is unaltered by the addition of a catalyst?
Enthalpy
More than one of these remain unaltered
Activation energy
Equilibrium constant
More than one of these remain unaltered
Catalysts are chemicals that function to speed up a reaction. They do not, however, change the amount of products produced (the equilibrium of the reaction). They just make it so that the equilibrium is reached at a faster rate. The main way catalysts decrease reaction rate is by lowering the activation energy. This is the energy peak required to create transition states (molecules that are in between reactants and products). Once past this peak, the transition states convert into the products. Catalysts lower this peak so that it is easier to create transition states.
As mentioned, equilibrium constant will not change because catalysts do not alter the equilibrium of the reaction. Enthalpy (change in heat) of the reaction will also remain constant because it is not altered by the catalyst.
Example Question #2 : Catalysts And Enzymes
Which of the following parameter(s) is/are unaltered in an adiabatic reaction?
Both of these
Neither of these
Heat in the surroundings
Heat inside the system
Both of these
An adiabatic reaction is characterized as a reaction that neither gains nor loses net heat. This means that the process of converting the reactants to products does not alter the heat in the system (reaction) or the surroundings; therefore, both the heat inside and outside the system will be constant.
Example Question #3 : Catalysts And Enzymes
Enzymes __________ the rate of reaction by __________ activation energy.
decrease . . . increasing
decrease . . . decreasing
increase . . . increasing
increase . . . decreasing
increase . . . decreasing
Enzymes are biological catalysts that speed up many reactions essential for the human body. Their chemistry is the same as catalysts. They speed up reactions by lowering the activation energy of reactions. This allows reactions to easily overcome the energy barrier and create the necessary products from reactants.
Example Question #14 : Reaction Kinetics
Which of the following is true regarding competitive inhibition?
I. They form covalent bonds with the active site
II. They are reversible
III. They are similar to allosteric inhibitors
III only
II only
I and II
II and III
II only
Competitive inhibition decreases enzyme activity by binding to the active site of the enzyme. Recall that active sites are sites on enzymes where the substrates bind. Upon binding to the enzyme, the substrates undergo changes that facilitate and speed up the chemical reaction. A competitive inhibitor binds to this active site and prevents the substrate from binding. With no binding, the substrate will not undergo the necessary changes and, subsequently, the chemical reaction. A key characterisitic of competitive inhibitors is that the bond between the inhibitor and the active site is reversible. This means that the chemical bonds involved here are weak, reversible noncovalent bonds such as hydrogen bonds and van der Waals forces. Covalent bonds are very strong and are usually found in irreversible interactions.
Allosteric inhibitors are molecules that bind to enzymes at their allosteric site(s). In this way, the allosteric inhibiton is very similar to, and is a subset of, another type of enzyme inhibition, noncompetitive inhibition.
Example Question #1 : Inhibitors
A researcher is analyzing the effects of an unknown inhibitor. He observes that the inhibition can be overcome by increasing the concentration of the substrate. What can you conclude about this inhibitor?
The inhibitor decreases the Michaelis constant
The inhibitor increases the Michaelis constant
The inhibitor increases the
The inhibitor decreases the
The inhibitor increases the Michaelis constant
Recall that competitive inhibition can be overcome by increasing substrate concentration. Competitive inhibitors alter the Michaelis constant, , but maintain the (maximum reaction rate). Inhibitors act to decrease the reaction rate. To figure out the effect of competitive inhibitors on the Michaelis constant, we need to look at the Michaelis-Menten equation.
where is reaction rate, is maximum reaction rate, is substrate concentration, and is the Michaelis constant. Since reaction rate is inversely proportional to the , competitive inhibitors will increase and, thereby, decrease reaction rate.
Example Question #2 : Inhibitors
The slope of a Lineweaver-Burk plot is and the x-intercept is . Upon addition of a noncompetitive inhibitor the slope increases to . Which of the following is the correct value of (Michaelis constant) after the addition of the inhibitor?
Cannot be determined from the given information
To answer this question we need to first figure out the equation for slope and x-intercept of Lineweaver-Burk plot. The Linweaver-Burk plot is a graphical way to plot the Michaelis-Menten equation. It is defined as the reciprocal of Michaelis-Menten equation. Michaelis-Menten equation is as follows.
where is reaction rate, is maximum reaction rate, is substrate concentration, and is the Michaelis constant. Taking the reciprocal of this gives us
The slope, therefore, is . The x-intercept can be found by plugging in zero for the Y value (the reaction rate, ). The x-intercept is .
The question states that the slope is and the x-intercept is . Using the equation for x-intercept we can solve for .
Using the equation for slope we can solve for
Recall that the addition of a noncompetitive inhibitor alters the but not the ; therefore, is still after the addition of noncompetitive inhibitior.
Note that if we were asked to solve for the , we would have had to use the new slope () and the same value ().
Example Question #3 : Inhibitors
Which of the following is true regarding noncompetitive inhibitors?
I. They do not form covalent bonds with the active site
II. They alter both Km and Vmax
III. They alter the shape of the active site
II and III
I and III
I only
III only
III only
Noncompetitive inhibitors bind to enzymes and prevent the formation of the enzyme-substrate complex. These inhibitors bind to a location other than the active site. Upon binding, the inhibitors alter the conformation of the active site and prevent the binding of substrate. They form covalent bonds with the enzyme; therefore, these are irreversible inhibitors and are hard to remove. and are altered by both types of inhibitors (competitive and noncompetitive). Competitive inhibitors alter the whereas the noncompetitive inhibitors alter the .
This implies that competitive inhibition can be overcome by increasing substrate concentration whereas noncompetitive inhibition cannot. Molecularly this makes sense. Competitive inhibitors bind reversibly to the active site and prevent binding of substrate. If we were to drastically increase its concentration, substrate will compete with and remove the competitive inhibitor from the active site. Noncompetitive inhibitors, on the other hand, alter the conformation of the active site, making it hard for substrates to bind to the active site; therefore, the substrate will not be able bind, regardless of the substrate concentration.
Example Question #20 : Reaction Kinetics
Upon addition of an inhibitor, which of the following is expected to happen in a catalytic reaction?
The amount of reactants will increase because the the forward reaction is halted
It will take longer to reach equilibrium
The amount of products will decrease because the equilibrium is shifted to the left
The amount of reactants will increase because the reverse reaction will be favored
It will take longer to reach equilibrium
Inhibitors are molecules that prevent the action of catalysts. They bind to catalysts and prevent substrate binding, thereby halting the catalytic action. Since catalysts increase the speed of a reaction, addition of an inhibitor will lower the speed of the reaction. This does not mean that the reaction will stop proceeding; it simple means that it will take longer for the reaction to complete (reach equilibrium).
Remember that a catalyst speeds up both the forward and the reverse reaction; therefore, inhibitors will slow down both reactions. As mentioned, inhibitors will only slow down the reaction. The amount of products produced (equilibrium) will not change, although it will take longer for products to form.
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