Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781285869759
Author: Frederick A. Bettelheim, William H. Brown, Mary K. Campbell, Shawn O. Farrell, Omar Torres
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Textbook Question
Chapter 23, Problem 23.8P
Monoamine oxidases are important enzymes in brain chemistry. Judging from the name, which of the following would be a suitable substrate for this class of enzymes:
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Chapter 23 Solutions
Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry
Ch. 23 - What is the difference between a catalyst and an...Ch. 23 - What are ribozymes made of?Ch. 23 - Would a lipase hydrolyze two triglycerides, one...Ch. 23 - Compare the activation energy in uncatalyzed...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.5PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.6PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.7PCh. 23 - Monoamine oxidases are important enzymes in brain...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.9PCh. 23 - 0 What kind of reaction does each of the following...
Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.11PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.12PCh. 23 - 3 What is the difference between reversible and...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.14PCh. 23 - 5 At a very low concentration of a certain...Ch. 23 - 6 If we wish to double the rate of an...Ch. 23 - 7 A bacterial enzyme has the following...Ch. 23 - 8 The optimal temperature for the action of...Ch. 23 - 9 The activity of pepsin was measured at various...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.20PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.21PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.22PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.23PCh. 23 - 4 What kind of chemical reaction occurs most...Ch. 23 - 5 Which of the following is a correct statement...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.26PCh. 23 - 7 Enzymes are long protein chains, usually...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.28PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.29PCh. 23 - 0 Can the product of a reaction that is part of a...Ch. 23 - 1 What is the difference between a zymogen and a...Ch. 23 - 2 The enzyme trypsin is synthesized by the body in...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.33PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.34PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.35PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.36PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.37PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.38PCh. 23 - 9 The enzyme phosphofructokinase (PFK) (Chapter...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.40PCh. 23 - 1 After a heart attack, the levels of certain...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.42PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.43PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.44PCh. 23 - 5 Chemists who have been exposed for years to or...Ch. 23 - 6 Which enzyme preparation is given to patients...Ch. 23 - 7 Chymotrypsm is secreted by the pancreas and...Ch. 23 - 8 Explain why transition-state analogs are potent...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.49PCh. 23 - 0 Explain the relationship between...Ch. 23 - 1 (Chemical Connections 23A) Acetylcholine causes...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.52PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.53PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.54PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.55PCh. 23 - 6 (Chemical Connections 23C) What role does Mn2+...Ch. 23 - 7 (Chemical Connections 23C) Which amino acids of...Ch. 23 - 8 (Chemical Connections 23D) What is the strategy...Ch. 23 - 9 (Chemical Connections 23D) Why did scientists...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.60PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.61PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.62PCh. 23 - 3 (Chemical Connections 23E) What is the...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.64PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.65PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.66PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.67PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.68PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.69PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.70PCh. 23 - 1 Food can be preserved by inactivation of enzymes...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.72PCh. 23 - 3 Would you expect to find active digestive...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.74PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.75PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.76PCh. 23 - 7 An enzyme has the following pH dependence: At...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.78PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.79PCh. 23 - 0 Nerve gases operate by forming covalent bonds at...Ch. 23 - 1 What would be the appropriate name for an enzyme...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.82PCh. 23 - 3 A liver enzyme is made of four subunits: 2A and...Ch. 23 - Prob. 23.84PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.85PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.86PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.87PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.88PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.89PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.90PCh. 23 - Prob. 23.91P
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- please help to resolve and explain. thanksarrow_forwardWhich of the following statements is incorrect? Select an answer and submit. For keyboard navigation, use the up/down arrow keys to select an answer. Inhibitors affect the ability of enzymes to function. Enzymes decompose during the reaction that they catalyze. The typical biochemical reaction occurs more than one million times faster in the presence of an enzyme wF to the reaction without the enzyme. The catalytic function of enzymes is dependent on their three-dimensional structuresarrow_forwardThe hydrolysis of pyrophosphate to orthophosphate drives biosynthetic reactions such as DNA synthesis. In Escherichia coli, a pyrophosphatase catalyzes this hydrolytic reaction. The pyrophosphatase has a mass of 120 kDa and consists of six identical subunits. A unit of activity for this enzyme, U, is the amount of enzyme that hydrolyzes 10 umol of pyrophosphate in 15 minutes. The purified enzyme has a Vnax of 2800 U per milligram of enzyme. When (S] >> KM, how many micromoles of substrate can 1 mg of enzyme hydrolyze per second? Vnax = umol -s. mg- If cach enzyme subunit has one active site, how many micromoles of active sites, or (E]r, are there in 1 mg of enzyme? (Er = umol - mg-arrow_forward
- A chemist wanted to test his hypothesis that the disulfide bridges that form in many proteins do so after the minimum energy conformation of the protein has been achieved. He treated a sample of an enzyme that contained four disulfide bridges with 2-mercaptoethanol and then added urea to denature the enzyme. He slowly removed these reagents so that the enzyme could re-fold and re-form the disulfide bridges. The enzyme he recovered had 80% of its original activity. What would be the percent activity in the recovered enzyme if disulfide bridge formation were entirely random rather than determined by the tertiary structure? Does this experiment support his hypothesis?arrow_forwardWhich of the common amino acids is not chiral? Sketch its structure and explain why it does not manifest chirality.arrow_forwardWrite a brief description of the relationships among each of the following groups of terms or phrases. Answers to the Concept-Linking Exercises are given at the end of the chapter. Enzyme, enzyme substrate, active site, induced fit modelarrow_forward
- The process by which an enzyme acts on the substrate can be described by the: a. lock-and-key model. b. enzyme-and-substrate model. c. enzyme folding model. d. catalytic model.arrow_forwardWhich of the following is not a characteristic of enzymes? a. They are macromolecules. b. They act on substances. c. They are phospholipids. d. They initiate and decelerate chemical reactions. e. They act as catalysts.arrow_forwardWhat is the general role of enzymes in the human body?arrow_forward
- The substrate dissociation constant, Ks, is k-1/k1. What do large values of this constant mean? That the formation of product will be fast Strong binding between enzyme and substrate that the reaction is unimolecular Weak binding between enzyme and substratearrow_forwardwhat is the N factor of disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetate (C10H14N2Na2O8)?arrow_forwardQuestion:In the context of bioinorganic chemistry, consider a hypothetical enzyme that utilizes a metal ion as a cofactor for catalytic activity. The enzyme shows activity only under aerobic conditions. However, when the oxygen concentration is extremely high, the enzyme loses its activity. Explain this phenomenon, providing a logical explanation based on the principles of bioinorganic chemistry.arrow_forward
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