Enzymes are biological molecules (proteins) that act as catalysts and help complex reactions occur everywhere in life. Let’s say you ate a piece of meat. Proteases would goto work and help break down the peptide bonds between the amino acids.
Will all enzymes break down all substances? No. Enzymes are very
specific catalysts and usually work to complete one task. An enzyme that
helps digest proteins will not be useful to break down carbohydrates.
Also, you will not find all enzymes everywhere in the body. That would be inefficient.
There are unique enzymes in neural cells, intestinal cells, and your
saliva.
Assembly Line Robots
You all know about cars and the assembly lines where they are made. There are giant robots helping people do specific tasks. Some lift the whole car, some liftThe robot that was designed to move a car door can't put brakes on the car. The specialized robot arms just can't do the
For example, some herbicides are used to block plant enzyme activity. A tiny herbicide molecule can attach to the active site
of an enzyme and stop it from working. Plants have adapted by changing
one or two amino acids in their enzymes. They adjust their structure,
are able to continue working, and the herbicide can no longer limit the
enzyme.
Four Steps of Enzyme Action
1. The enzyme and the substrate are in the same area. Some situations have more than one substrate molecule that the enzyme will change.2. The enzyme grabs on to the substrate at a special area called the active site. The combination is called the enzyme/substrate complex. Enzymes are very, very specific and don't just grab on to any molecule. The active site is a specially shaped area of the enzyme that fits around the substrate. The active site is like the grasping claw of the robot on the assembly line. It can only pick up one or two parts.
3. A process called catalysis happens. Catalysis is when the substrate is changed. It could be broken down or combined with another molecule to make something new. It will break or build chemical bonds. When done, you will have the enzyme/products complex.
4. The enzyme releases the product. When the enzyme lets go, it returns to its original shape. It is then ready to work on another molecule of substrate.
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