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Enzymes(酶)

Enzymes are very efficient and specific catalyst proteins which react with 1 or few types of substrates in biochemical reactions and are responsible for bringing about almost all of the chemical reactions in living organisms. Enzymes speed up reactions by providing an alternative reaction pathway of lower activation energy. Without enzymes, reactions take place at a rate far too slow for the pace of metabolism which means that they speed up the chemical reactions in living things.

There are 2 types of enzymes, ones that help join specific molecules together to form new molecules & others that help break specific molecules apart into separate molecules. Enzymes play many important roles ouside the cell as well. One of the best examples of this is the digestive system. For instance, it is enzymes in your digestive system that break food down in your digestive system break food down into small molecules that can be absorbed by the body. Some enzymes in your digestive system break down starch, some proteins and others break down fats. The enzymes used to digest our food are extra-cellular since they are located outside our cells & enzymes inside our cells are intra-cellular enzymes. Enzymes are used in ALL chemical reactions in living things; this includes respiration, photosynthesis, movement growth, getting rid of toxic chemicals in the liver and so on. Enzymes are proteins that must have the correct structure to be active. They are very easily affected by heat, pH and heavy metal ions.

Ribonucleoprotein enzyme catalytic activity is located in the protein part but for some the catalytic activity is in the RNA part. A catalyst is any substance which makes a chemical reaction go faster, without itself being changed. A catalyst can be used over and over again in a chemical reaction and does not get used up.

Enzymes lower the amount of activation energy needed by binding to the reactants of the reaction they catalyze, thus speed up the reaction and can process millions of molecules per second. Enzymes are typically large proteins with high molecular weight that permit reactions to go at conditions that the body can tolerate.

Enzyme nomenclature is based on what the enzyme reacts with & how it reacts along with the ending ase.

Enzymes must get over the activation energy hurdle.

Enzymes change how a reaction will proceed which reduces the activation energy and makes it faster. The more we increase the enzyme concentration the faster the reaction rate for non-catalyzed reactions. Enzymes that are catalyzed reactions also increase reaction rate at higher level of concentration but up to a certain point called Vmax which means that the enzyme has reached its maximum point. The reaction is limited by both the concentrations of the enzyme and substrate. Enzymes as catalysts take part in reactions which provide an alternative reaction pathway. Enzymes do not undergo permanent changes and remain unchanged at the end of the reaction. They only change the rate of reaction, not the position of the equilibrium.Enzymes as catalysts are highly selective by only catalysing specific reactions due to the shapes of the enzyme’s molecule.

Enzymes contain a globular protein part called apoenzyme and a non-protein part named cofactor or prosthetic group or metal-ion-activator. Changes in temperature and pH have great influence on the intra- and intermolecular bonds that hold the protein part in their secondary and tertiary structures.

Examples of cofactors are 1. Prosthetic group that are permanently bound to the enzyme. 2. Activator group which are cations (positively charged metal ions) & temporarily bind to the active site of the enzyme. 3.Coenzymes, usually vitamins or made from vitamins which are not permanently bound to the enzyme molecule, but combine with the enzyme-substrate complex temporarily. Enzymes require the presence cofactors before their catalytic activity can be exerted. This entire active complex is referred to as the holoenzyme.

Without enzymes, our guts would take weeks to digest our food, our muscles, nerves and bones would not work properly and so on…

Main Enzyme category groups:

Oxidoreductases:
All enzymes that catalyse oxido-reductions belong in this class. The substrate oxidized is regarded as a hydrogen or electron donor. The classification is based on 'donor:acceptor oxidoreductase'. The common name is 'dehydrogenase', wherever this is possible; as an alternative, 'acceptor reductase' can be used. 'Oxidase' is used only where O2 is an acceptor. Classification is difficult in some cases, because of the lack of specificity towards the acceptor.

Transferases:
Transferases are enzymes that transfer a group, for example, the methyl group or a glycosyl group, from one compound (generally regarded as donor) to another compound (generally regarded as acceptor). The classification is based on the scheme 'donor:acceptor grouptransferase'. The common names are normally formed as 'acceptor grouptransferase' or 'donor grouptransferase'. In many cases, the donor is a cofactor (coenzyme) that carries the group to be transferred. The aminotransferases constitute a special case.

Hydrolases:
These enzymes catalyse the hydrolysis of various bonds. Some of these enzymes pose problems because they have a very wide specificity, and it is not easy to decide if two preparations described by different authors are the same, or if they should be listed under different entries. While the systematic name always includes 'hydrolase', the common name is, in most cases, formed by the name of the substrate with the suffix -ase. It is understood that the name of the substrate with this suffix, and no other indicator, means a hydrolytic enzyme. It should be noted that peptidases have recommended names rather than common names.

Lyases:
Lyases are enzymes that cleave C-C, C-O, C-N and other bonds by means other than by hydrolysis or oxidation. They differ from other enzymes in that two (or more) substrates are involved in one reaction direction, but there is one compound fewer in the other direction. When acting on the single substrate, a molecule is eliminated and this generates either a new double bond or a new ring. The systematic name is formed according to 'substrate group-lyase'. In common names, expressions like decarboxylase, aldolase, etc. are used. 'Dehydratase' is used for those enzymes that eliminate water. In cases where the reverse reaction is the more important, or the only one to be demonstrated, 'synthase' may be used in the name.

Ligases:
Ligases are enzymes that catalyse the joining of two molecules with concomitant hydrolysis of the diphosphate bond in ATP or a similar triphosphate. 'Ligase' is often used for the common name, but, in a few cases, 'synthase' or 'carboxylase' is used. 'Synthetase' may be used in place of 'synthase' for enzymes in this class.

Products for  Enzymes

  1. Cat.No. 产品名称 Information
  2. GP22402 XPNPEP1 Human X-Prolyl Aminopeptidase-1 Human Recombinant
  3. GP22401 WWOX Human WW Domain Containing Oxidoreductase Human Recombinant
  4. GP22400 WARS Human Tryptophanyl-tRNA Synthetase Human Recombinant
  5. GP22399 UROS Human Uroporphyrinogen III Synthase Human Recombinant
  6. GP22398 Urokinase Urokinase Human Recombinant
  7. GP22397 Urokinase Human Urokinase Human
  8. GP22396 UROD Human Uroporphyrinogen Decarboxylase Human Recombinant
  9. GP22395 Uricase Urate Oxidase Recombinant
  10. GP22394 Urease Urease Recombinant
  11. GP22392 UPRT Human Uracil Phosphoribosyltransferase Human Recombinant
  12. GP22391 UPP1 E.coli Uridine Phosphorylase E.coli Recombinant
  13. GP22390 UPP1 Salmonella Uridine Phosphorylase Salmonella Typhimurium Recombinant
  14. GP22389 UPP1 Human Uridine Phosphorylase 1 Human Recombinant
  15. GP22388 UNG E.Coli Uracil DNA Glycosylase E.Coli Recombinant
  16. GP22387 UNG Uracil DNA Glycosilase
  17. GP22386 UMPS Human, Sf9 Uridine Monophosphate Synthetase Human Recombinant, Sf9
  18. GP22385 UMPS Human Uridine Monophosphate Synthetase Human Recombinant
  19. GP22384 UMOD Porcine Uromodulin Porcine
  20. GP22383 UMOD Feline Uromodulin Feline
  21. GP22382 UMOD Canine Uromodulin Canine
  22. GP22381 UMOD Human Uromodulin Human
  23. GP22380 UGP2 Human UDP-Glucose Pyrophosphorylase 2 Human Recombinant
  24. GP22379 UGT8 Human UDP Glycosyltransferase 8 Human Recombinant
  25. GP22378 UGDH Mouse UDP-Glucose Dehydrogenase Mouse Recombinant
  26. GP22377 UGDH Human UDP-Glucose Dehydrogenase Human Recombinant
  27. GP22376 UGT1A1 Human UDP Glucuronosyltransferase 1 Family Polypeptide A1 Human Recombinant
  28. GP22375 UFC1 Human Ubiquitin Fold Modifier Conjugating Enzyme 1 Human Recombinant
  29. GP22374 UCHL5 Human Ubiquitin Carboxyl-Terminal Esterase L5 Human Recombinant
  30. GP22373 UCHL3 Mouse Ubiquitin Carboxyl-Terminal Esterase L3 Mouse Recombinant
  31. GP22372 UCHL3 Human Ubiquitin Carboxyl-Terminal Esterase L3 Human Recombinant
  32. GP22371 UBE2Z Human Ubiquitin Conjugating Enzyme E2Z Human Recombinant
  33. GP22370 UBE2W Human Ubiquitin Conjugating Enzyme E2W Human Recombinant
  34. GP22369 UBE2V2 Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2 Variant 2 Human Recombinant
  35. GP22368 UBE2T Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2T Human Recombinant
  36. GP22367 UBE2S Human Ubiquitin Conjugating Enzyme E2S Human Recombinant
  37. GP22366 UBE2R2 Human Ubiquitin Conjugating Enzyme E2R 2 Human Recombinant
  38. GP22365 UBE2Q2 Human Ubiquitin Conjugating Enzyme E2Q2 Human Recombinant
  39. GP22364 UBE2M Human Ubiquitin Conjugating Enzyme E2M Human Recombinant
  40. GP22363 UBE2L6 Human Ubiquitin Conjugating Enzyme E2L 6 Human Recombinant
  41. GP22362 UBE2L3 Human His Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2L 3 Human Recombinant, His Tag
  42. GP22361 UBE2L3 Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2L 3 Human Recombinant
  43. GP22360 UBE2K Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2K Human Recombinant
  44. GP22359 UBE2J2 Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2, J2 Human Recombinant
  45. GP22358 UBE2I Human His Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2I Human Recombinant, His Tag
  46. GP22357 UBE2I Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2I Human Recombinant
  47. GP22356 UBE2H Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2H Human Recombinant
  48. GP22355 UBE2G2 Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2G2 Human Recombinant
  49. GP22354 UBE2G Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2G Human Recombinant
  50. GP22353 UBE2F Human Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme E2F Human Recombinant
  51. GP22352 UBE2E3 Human Ubiquitin Conjugating Enzyme E2E3 Human Recombinant

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