1 / 14

How are enzyme activities affected by temperature and pH ?

How are enzyme activities affected by temperature and pH ?. 1 Temperature.  Enzyme activity is usually expressed in terms of reaction rate. the rate at which substrates are used up or broken down, or the rate of formation of product(s).

minhg
Télécharger la présentation

How are enzyme activities affected by temperature and pH ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How are enzyme activities affected by temperature and pH ? 1 Temperature  Enzyme activity is usually expressed in terms ofreaction rate. • the rate at whichsubstrates are used up or broken down,or the rate offormation of product(s) • increase to a maximumand thendecrease as the temperature increases

  2. At low temperatures:  Enzymes may beinactiveand the reaction rate islow. As the temperature rises:  Substrate and enzyme molecules havemore kinetic energyand vibrate more rapidly. enzyme activity temperature

  3.  The chance of hitting each other to forman enzyme-substrate complexincreases, thus have ahigher reaction rate.  The reaction rate is the highest at theoptimum temperature. enzyme activity temperature 0 40 ℃ This enzyme works best at 40 ℃ !

  4.  When the temperature isabove the optimum, shapesof enzymemolecules begin tochange.  Denaturation of enzyme enzyme activity  Enzyme loses its function andenzyme activity drops! temperature 40 ℃

  5. 2 pH  Enzymes usually work within anarrow range of pH. Enzyme activity pH 2 4 6 8 10 12 14  Becausechange in pHvalue alsochanges the shapeof an enzyme.

  6.  Enzymes work best at theiroptimum pH. pepsin salivary amylase • Optimum pH for pepsin is __. 2 • Optimum pH for salivary amylase is __. Enzyme activity 7 pancreatic lipase • Optimum pH for pancreatic lipase is ___. 10 pH 2 4 6 8 10 12 14  A great change in pH can causedenaturation.

  7. Applications of enzymes  Proteaseare added to some washing powders to help in cleaning. An enzyme to digestproteins. Why proteases are added ??

  8. Applications of enzymes  Papain from plants like papayas are added to meat tenderizers to soften meat. What is papain?? It is an enzyme!! (Remember that?)

  9. Applications of enzymes  Some contact lens cleaners contain proteases to remove proteins.

  10. Applications of enzymes  Cellulase is used to produce stonewashed jeans. What is cellulase? Is it an enzyme? Cellulase is an enzyme to digest cellulose!

  11. Design a fair test to compare the enzyme activities of two biological washing powders. Discuss with your group members and present your ideas on the following items: • The method used to solve the problem. (Use labelled diagrams to illustrate the procedures!). • The way by which experimental results is collected. • The independent, dependent and controlled variables of this investigation.

  12. Investigation of protease activities in different fruit juices Procedures: 1Heat the end of a cork borer in a Bunsen flame and allow it to cool. 2Gentlypress the borer down into the milk-agar to make 5 wells. Replace the lid quickly. 3Make amark on the plate to indicate the arrangement of samples.

  13. Investigation of protease activities in different fruit juices 4 Use a clean dropper to fill up each wells with pineapple juice, Kiwi fruit juice, papaya juice, pineapple juice and distilled water. different fruit juices distilled water 5 Replace the lid. Incubate the plate at 35 ℃ for one hour. Home Back Next

  14. Investigation of protease activities in different fruit juices 6Measure the diameter of the clear zones around the wells by placing the plate on a graph paper and examining against light. Home Back Next

More Related