enzymes

(noun)

Biological molecules that catalyze (i.e., increase the rates of) chemical reactions.

Related Terms

  • apoenzyme
  • reaction
  • Synthetic
  • rennin
  • chemical reactions
  • cofactor

(noun)

Enzymes are large biological molecules responsible for the thousands of chemical interconversions that sustain life. They are highly selective catalysts, greatly accelerating both the rate and specificity of metabolic reactions, from the digestion of food to the synthesis of DNA.

Related Terms

  • apoenzyme
  • reaction
  • Synthetic
  • rennin
  • chemical reactions
  • cofactor

Examples of enzymes in the following topics:

  • Enzymes Used in Industry

    • Synthetic molecules, called artificial enzymes, also display enzyme-like catalysis.
    • Inhibitors can decrease enzyme activity; activators can increase activity.
    • Many drugs and poisons are enzyme inhibitors.
    • In addition, some household products use enzymes to speed up biochemical reactions (e.g., enzymes in biological washing powders break down protein or fat stains on clothes; enzymes in meat tenderizers break down proteins into smaller molecules, making the meat easier to chew).
    • Industrially-produced barley enzymes are widely used in the brewing process to substitute for the natural enzymes found in barley.
  • Molecular Products from Microbes

    • Taq polymerase is an enzyme that was first isolated from the microbe Thermus aquaticus.
    • Restriction enzymes are a specific class of enzymes isolated from various bacteria and archaea, in which they grow naturally as a means of protection against viral infection.
    • The enzymes have the ability to recognize foreign DNA and cut it up.
    • The bacteria and archaea from which these enzymes are isolated from have innate mechanisms to protect their own DNA sequences from these enzymes, such as methylation.
    • Describe how Taq polymerase, restriction enzymes and DNA ligase are used in molecular biology
  • Carboxysomes

    • Carboxysomes are intracellular structures that contain enzymes involved in carbon fixation and found in many autotrophic bacteria.
    • They are proteinaceous structures resembling phage heads in their morphology; they contain the enzymes of carbon dioxide fixation in these organisms.
    • Similar structures are known to harbor the B12-containing coenzyme glycerol dehydratase, the key enzyme of glycerol fermentation to 1,3-propanediol, in some Enterobacteriaceae, such as Salmonella.
    • Carboxysomes are bacterial microcompartments that contain enzymes involved in carbon fixation.
    • These compartments are thought to concentrate carbon dioxide to overcome the inefficiency of RuBisCo (ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) - the predominant enzyme in carbon fixation and the rate limiting enzyme in the Calvin cycle.
  • Protease Inhibitors

    • Protease inhibitors target viral proteases which are key enzymes for the completion of viral maturation.
    • Proteases are enzymes that have the ability to cut proteins into peptides.
    • Protease inhibitors are short peptide-like molecules that are competitive inhibitors of the enzyme.
    • Mutations in the enzyme active site and other sites, which cause conformational changes, can cause resistance.
    • The drug is ritonavir depicted here with a white molecule in the middle of the enzyme structure.
  • Inhibiting Nucleic Acid Synthesis

    • Antimicrobial drugs inhibit nucleic acid synthesis through differences in prokaryotic and eukaryotic enzymes.
    • The antimicrobial actions of these agents are a result of differences in prokaryotic and eukaryotic enzymes involved in nucleic acid synthesis.
    • RNA Polymerase, an enzyme that produces RNA, from T. aquaticus pictured during elongation.
    • Portions of the enzyme were made transparent so as to make the path of RNA and DNA more clear.
    • The magnesium ion (yellow) is located at the enzyme active site.
  • Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA)

    • Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) is a solid-phase enzyme immunoassay used to detect the presence of a substance in solution.
    • ELISA uses a specific antibody with a covalently coupled enzyme.
    • Unbound antigen is removed by washing, and a second antibody which is linked to an enzyme is allowed to bind.
    • This second antibody-enzyme complex constitutes the indicator system of the test.
    • The antigen serves as bridge, so the more antigen in the test solution, the more enzyme-linked antibody will bind .
  • Nucleotide and Nonnucleotide Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors

    • Reverse transcriptase is an enzyme that has the ability to transcribe single-stranded DNA from a single-stranded RNA chain.
    • This enzyme is also found in tumors and cancer cells.
    • Drugs that inhibit the function of this enzyme are divided into three groups:
    • Resistance to the non-nucleotide inhibitors is caused by mutations in the inhibitor binding site of the enzyme.
    • Such mutations prevent the binding of the inhibitor to the enzyme.
  • Regulation of the Calvin Cycle

    • Each of these phases are tightly regulated and require unique and specific enzymes.
    • RuBisCO is identified as the most abundant enzyme on earth, to date.
    • The enzyme aldolase is typically characterized as a glycolytic enzyme with the ability to split fructose 1,6-bisphosphate into DHAP and G3P.
    • This process requires ATP and specific enzymes.
    • After this final enzyme performs this conversion, the Calvin cycle is considered complete.
  • Cofactors and Energy Transitions

    • These proteins are commonly enzymes.
    • An inactive enzyme without the cofactor is called an apoenzyme, while the complete enzyme with cofactor is the holoenzyme.
    • Some enzymes or enzyme complexes require several cofactors.
    • Each class of group-transfer reaction is carried out by a particular cofactor, which is the substrate for a set of enzymes that produce it and a set of enzymes that consume it.
    • Here, hundreds of separate types of enzymes remove electrons from their substrates and reduce NAD+ to NADH.
  • Oxidoreductase Protein Complexes

    • In biochemistry, an oxidoreductase is an enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of electrons from one molecule to another.
    • In biochemistry, an oxidoreductase is an enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of electrons from one molecule, the reductant, also called the electron donor, to another the oxidant, also called the electron acceptor.
    • This group of enzymes usually utilizes NADP or NAD+ as cofactors.
    • For example, an enzyme that catalyzed this reaction would be an oxidoreductase: A– + B → A + B–.
    • Oxidoreductases are classified as EC 1 in the EC number classification of enzymes.
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