Somebody help please...

Chat viewable by general public

Moderator: Moderators

Post Reply
User avatar
Lainey
Scholar
Posts: 300
Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 12:38 pm
Location: Canada

Somebody help please...

Post #1

Post by Lainey »

1. Consider the following hypothetical biochemical reactions, where E represents various enzymes and the other letters represent various reactants and products; then answer the questions below.

1. Consider the following hypothetical biochemical reactions, where E represents various enzymes and the other letters represent various reactants and products; then answer the questions below.


E1 E2 E3 E4
A-------->B-------->C-------->D--------F
l
l E5
V--------->G

NOTE: The two "L's" and the "V" are supposed to be a down arrow, and it's supposed to come down from just after the "C." The E1, E2, E3, and E4 are supposed to be on top of all the arrows that go across. (E1 is between A and B, E2 is between B and C, etc). I can't make it look the way I want it to.
a). If enzyme E2 was not functional (e.g., through the mutation of a gene or the presence of an inhibitor), which product or products would not be formed? (2 marks)
I think it would be C, D, F, and G, would it not? Or am I missing something? I don't really understand this whole enzyme thing.
b). If enzyme E3 was not functional, what substance or substances would have to be added to allow the organism to function normally?
I have no idea. Hints, anyone?

I appreciate any help I can get from you folks that are way smarter at science than I am. I'm nearing the end of my course and HAVE to be done by the end of the month! (I've been procrastinating...) :(

Please help...please? Pretty please with sugar on top?

User avatar
juliod
Guru
Posts: 1882
Joined: Sun Dec 26, 2004 9:04 pm
Location: Washington DC
Been thanked: 1 time

Post #2

Post by juliod »

If I understand correctly, the E5 arrow is supposed to connect C to G. If so, then...

Your answer to question A is correct.

The answer to B is more complicated (it appears to be a poorly thought-out question, unless there is more information provided).

If E3 is non-functional, then supplying chemical D will suffice.

But if E3 is non-functional, and D is merely a intermediate in this pathway (with no other biochemical functions), then supplying F will also suffice.

So the answer is D and/or F, depending on whether D has functions other than this pathway.

And shouldn't you be doing your own homework questions?

DanZ

User avatar
McCulloch
Site Supporter
Posts: 24063
Joined: Mon May 02, 2005 9:10 pm
Location: Toronto, ON, CA
Been thanked: 3 times

Post #3

Post by McCulloch »

juliod wrote:And shouldn't you be doing your own homework questions?
Moderator Intervention

Doesn't that question belong in Right and Wrong, our ethics forum?

Just kidding!
Examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good.
First Epistle to the Church of the Thessalonians
The truth will make you free.
Gospel of John

User avatar
Jose
Guru
Posts: 2011
Joined: Thu Sep 02, 2004 4:08 pm
Location: Indiana

Re: Somebody help please...

Post #4

Post by Jose »

Having just read juliod's post, I suspect I didn't "fix" the diagram properly. Ah well. See if you can make sense of it the way I've said it here, and then draw out the diagram correctly and use the same logic.
Lainey wrote:
1. Consider the following hypothetical biochemical reactions, where E represents various enzymes and the other letters represent various reactants and products; then answer the questions below.


.......E1..........E2...........E3.........E4
A-------->B-------->C-------->D--------F
.\
..\ E5
...\--------->G

NOTE: The two "L's" and the "V" are supposed to be a down arrow, and it's supposed to come down from just after the "C." The E1, E2, E3, and E4 are supposed to be on top of all the arrows that go across. (E1 is between A and B, E2 is between B and C, etc). I can't make it look the way I want it to.
You can sometimes trick the display by putting in periods and coloring them "cyan," to kinda match the background.
a). If enzyme E2 was not functional (e.g., through the mutation of a gene or the presence of an inhibitor), which product or products would not be formed? (2 marks)
I think it would be C, D, F, and G, would it not? Or am I missing something? I don't really understand this whole enzyme thing.
Look up my animations and see if any of the enzyme or metabolism animations do any good. In particular, look at the Lego movies. They might help..or might not, who knows? I built the animations because this stuff is hard to "see," and I thought that interactive animations might get people past some of the stumbling blocks. I created the Lego movies because people have a hard time with enzymes--and among the things I found out, is that people have a hard time with paper-and-pencil diagrams. Sometimes, an arrow means "move from left to right" and sometimes it means "the thing on the left is changed into the thing on the right," and sometimes it means "the thing on the left happened before the thing on the right, even though the two things themselves are completely unrelated." And, silly as we are, we expect people to figure out what the arrows mean from the context of the diagram--but you can't figure out the diagram without knowing what the arrows mean.

What you want to do is picture this stuff going on. You have a big pile of A's. If you've got E1, you can turn A's into B's. If you've got E2, you can turn B's into C's. ...and so on. E5 can also work on A's, but it turns 'em into G's.

You can try picturing it as Lego structures (a couple of my animations use legos, and use hands as the "enzymes"), with each enzyme being a different kind of hand that adds something or takes something off or rearranges the legos in some way.

Or, if you want a different kind of picture, think of some big buckets, one above the other, and a little offset. Each bucket has a hole on the side, at the bottom; one hole in the top bucket is "E1" and the hole in the second bucket is "E2" and so on. If you pour water (A) into the top bucket, there it is, water (agua, A). When the hole E1 "acts on" the water (A), the water squirts through the hole, at the same time turning blue (B), and flows into the next bucket. When hole E2 works on the blue liquid (B), the liquid squirts through the hole, and turns chartreuse (C). The chartreuse liquid flows into the next bucket. When hole E3 works on the liquid (no longer water, because it's been changed), the liquid squirts through the hole, turns dark-red (D), and flows into the next bucket... and so on. The top bucket actually has two holes, though, on opposite sides--hole E1 and hole E5. So, plain agua can be "acted on" by E1, or by E5. When E5 acts on it, the water flows through hole E5, turns green (G), and flows into a different bucket on the other side from the other buckets.

OK...pick your analogy. If E1 doesn't work, then the first hand in the series isn't there. The first Lego structure cannot be worked on, cannot be turned into Lego structure B. Or, by the bucket analogy, "hole E1" is plugged up. No water can get through it. The second bucket stays empty.

If B never gets made (whatever analogy you like), then there's nothing to make C out of, and nothing to make D out of, and nothing to make F out of. But E5 is still there, and can still work on A, so there's plenty of G. In fact, there's probably more G than normal--because the "pathway" for making F isn't working to help use up the A.

It might look kinda like this in the diagram. I'll use X to represent the dead enzyme--we'd usually write the name of the enzyme, E1, with an X through it, but we're limited to one character per space here. I'll also color all of the "things that don't happen" in cyan, so they're harder to see. Usually, we'd just put a vertical slash through the arrow representing E1, and pretend that this tells people what we're trying to say:
.......X..........E2...........E3.........E4
A-------->B-------->C-------->D--------F
.\
..\ E5
...\--------->G

It's more fun if E2 doesn't work. Then, B is made just fine--but cannot be worked on. B builds up. Using the bucket analogy, B cotinues to be made because the E1 hole is happily turning water blue and pouring it out--but there's nowhere for the B to go. The bucket fills up and spills over and we get a mess--but still no C or D or F. This is the sort of thing that happens in some of the diseases we know of, like PKU. There, one of the enzymes involved in phenylalanine degradation doesn't work. The "blue water" analog--the chemical that builds up--is excreted in the urine, and smells somewhat like maple syrup. It also causes brain damage. That's why newborns are always tested immediately for PKU. If they don't have the enzyme, they are put on a special diet that has very little phenylalanine (enough to survive, but no more).

.......E1....................X...........E3.........E4
A-------->B B B B-------->C-------->D--------F
.\.......... B B B B
..\ E5.........B B
...\--------->G
b). If enzyme E3 was not functional, what substance or substances would have to be added to allow the organism to function normally?
I have no idea. Hints, anyone?
Ha! You can figure this out now. Draw yourself a diagram with the appropriate parts "hidden" and you'll see it.

No E3? Can't make D or F. and C accumulates. You could feed 'em D or F, if the organism's problem is "lack of F." The human analogy would be any of a number of things...we can't make ascorbic acid, so we have to eat it (vitamin C); we can't make any of the "vitamins" so we have to eat them. We can't make lysine, or a number of other amino acids, so we have to eat them. The best inferences we can make from the available data tell us that our distant could make these things, and we carry mutations that make us unable to. It's the same idea.

In any event, the important thing is to get away from seeing the diagrams as diagrams, and try to visualize the processes of things being converted into other things. It's hard to picture the actual chemicals, and even harder to picture enzymes realistically (but there are plenty of images if you need them and think they'd help). It's easier to think of legos, for the smiple reason that the chemicals that we (and everything else) are made of are relatively few in number; the enzymes mostly just take 'em apart and put 'em back together again in different arrangements.

In my view, this biochemistry stuff is really important--especially if we ever expect to engage in activities where knowing a bit about it would be helpful, like eating or having kids or getting sick or helping our parents as they age (I'm on number 5 now). I don't believe in memorizing the details (you can always look them up), but a general sense of what's going on is really helpful.

Keep me posted on how things are going.

--Jose
Panza llena, corazon contento

User avatar
methylatedghosts
Sage
Posts: 516
Joined: Sun Oct 08, 2006 8:21 pm
Location: Dunedin, New Zealand

Re: Somebody help please...

Post #5

Post by methylatedghosts »

Lainey wrote:
1. Consider the following hypothetical biochemical reactions, where E represents various enzymes and the other letters represent various reactants and products; then answer the questions below.


.......E1..........E2...........E3.........E4
A-------->B-------->C-------->D--------F
....................................\
.....................................\ E5
......................................\--------->G
I think this is how you mean the diagram looks like.

One question, if "G" comes down via E5, but after the "C", not directly from "C", does this mean "E3" is also required for "G" or no?

Seems to me that the question would otherwise have G coming straight off of "C".

Or am I just reading into it too much?

User avatar
Lainey
Scholar
Posts: 300
Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 12:38 pm
Location: Canada

Post #6

Post by Lainey »

Juliod wrote:If I understand correctly, the E5 arrow is supposed to connect C to G. If so, then...

Your answer to question A is correct.

Yeah, it's supposed to look like this (thanks, Jose!):

......E1..........E2..........E3.........E4
A-------->B-------->C--------D--------F
...............................\
................................\ E5
.................................\
...................................------>G

I figured if you shut down E2, everything after it wouldn't be formed. I would like to point out, Juliod, that I did figure that one out myself, and just needed clarification. :P
Juliod wrote:The answer to B is more complicated (it appears to be a poorly thought-out question, unless there is more information provided).

If E3 is non-functional, then supplying chemical D will suffice.

But if E3 is non-functional, and D is merely a intermediate in this pathway (with no other biochemical functions), then supplying F will also suffice.
Heh? :confused2: I hope you don't lecture me because I don't understand this part! Y'see, it's like when there's science involved, a wall goes up in my brain. I know the answer's out there somewhere, but I have to get over the wall first. ](*,)
Juliod wrote:So the answer is D and/or F, depending on whether D has functions other than this pathway.

And shouldn't you be doing your own homework questions?

DanZ
Yessir... :oops:

However, I never asked for the answer, now did I? I asked for clarification, and a hint (to point me in the right direction).

I thought to myself, after I couldn't get anything helpful out of the textbook, where can I find me some real smart scientifically-minded people? So naturally I thought of here.

But thanks for the help, anyway... O:)

User avatar
Lainey
Scholar
Posts: 300
Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 12:38 pm
Location: Canada

Post #7

Post by Lainey »

McCulloch wrote:
Juliod wrote: And shouldn't you be doing your own homework questions?

Moderator Intervention

Doesn't that question belong in Right and Wrong, our ethics forum?

Just kidding!
Uh-oh! I'm goin' down!!! :shock:

User avatar
Lainey
Scholar
Posts: 300
Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 12:38 pm
Location: Canada

Post #8

Post by Lainey »

Jose wrote:Look up my animations and see if any of the enzyme or metabolism animations do any good. In particular, look at the Lego movies. They might help..or might not, who knows? I built the animations because this stuff is hard to "see," and I thought that interactive animations might get people past some of the stumbling blocks. I created the Lego movies because people have a hard time with enzymes--and among the things I found out, is that people have a hard time with paper-and-pencil diagrams. Sometimes, an arrow means "move from left to right" and sometimes it means "the thing on the left is changed into the thing on the right," and sometimes it means "the thing on the left happened before the thing on the right, even though the two things themselves are completely unrelated." And, silly as we are, we expect people to figure out what the arrows mean from the context of the diagram--but you can't figure out the diagram without knowing what the arrows mean.

What you want to do is picture this stuff going on. You have a big pile of A's. If you've got E1, you can turn A's into B's. If you've got E2, you can turn B's into C's. ...and so on. E5 can also work on A's, but it turns 'em into G's.

You can try picturing it as Lego structures (a couple of my animations use legos, and use hands as the "enzymes"), with each enzyme being a different kind of hand that adds something or takes something off or rearranges the legos in some way.

Or, if you want a different kind of picture, think of some big buckets, one above the other, and a little offset. Each bucket has a hole on the side, at the bottom; one hole in the top bucket is "E1" and the hole in the second bucket is "E2" and so on. If you pour water (A) into the top bucket, there it is, water (agua, A). When the hole E1 "acts on" the water (A), the water squirts through the hole, at the same time turning blue (B), and flows into the next bucket. When hole E2 works on the blue liquid (B), the liquid squirts through the hole, and turns chartreuse (C). The chartreuse liquid flows into the next bucket. When hole E3 works on the liquid (no longer water, because it's been changed), the liquid squirts through the hole, turns dark-red (D), and flows into the next bucket... and so on. The top bucket actually has two holes, though, on opposite sides--hole E1 and hole E5. So, plain agua can be "acted on" by E1, or by E5. When E5 acts on it, the water flows through hole E5, turns green (G), and flows into a different bucket on the other side from the other buckets.

OK...pick your analogy. If E1 doesn't work, then the first hand in the series isn't there. The first Lego structure cannot be worked on, cannot be turned into Lego structure B. Or, by the bucket analogy, "hole E1" is plugged up. No water can get through it. The second bucket stays empty.

If B never gets made (whatever analogy you like), then there's nothing to make C out of, and nothing to make D out of, and nothing to make F out of. But E5 is still there, and can still work on A, so there's plenty of G. In fact, there's probably more G than normal--because the "pathway" for making F isn't working to help use up the A.

It might look kinda like this in the diagram. I'll use X to represent the dead enzyme--we'd usually write the name of the enzyme, E1, with an X through it, but we're limited to one character per space here. I'll also color all of the "things that don't happen" in cyan, so they're harder to see. Usually, we'd just put a vertical slash through the arrow representing E1, and pretend that this tells people what we're trying to say:
.......X..........E2...........E3.........E4
A-------->B-------->C-------->D--------F
.\
..\ E5
...\--------->G

It's more fun if E2 doesn't work. Then, B is made just fine--but cannot be worked on. B builds up. Using the bucket analogy, B cotinues to be made because the E1 hole is happily turning water blue and pouring it out--but there's nowhere for the B to go. The bucket fills up and spills over and we get a mess--but still no C or D or F. This is the sort of thing that happens in some of the diseases we know of, like PKU. There, one of the enzymes involved in phenylalanine degradation doesn't work. The "blue water" analog--the chemical that builds up--is excreted in the urine, and smells somewhat like maple syrup. It also causes brain damage. That's why newborns are always tested immediately for PKU. If they don't have the enzyme, they are put on a special diet that has very little phenylalanine (enough to survive, but no more).

.......E1....................X...........E3.........E4
A-------->B B B B-------->C-------->D--------F
.\.......... B B B B
..\ E5.........B B
...\--------->G
Wow! 'K, first of all, holy crap! That's a lot of stuff to digest. I looked at your animations, and they helped, but I do pretty much understand the idea of substrates and how enzymes work on them. It's just the chain reactions I have trouble with. So from what you and Juliod said, it actually looks like it's pretty easy. I think I was making it harder in my head than it has to be. There's that brick wall again. ](*,)

Jose wrote:
I wrote:
My assignment wrote:b). If enzyme E3 was not functional, what substance or substances would have to be added to allow the organism to function normally?
I have no idea. Hints, anyone?

Ha! You can figure this out now. Draw yourself a diagram with the appropriate parts "hidden" and you'll see it.

No E3? Can't make D or F. and C accumulates. You could feed 'em D or F, if the organism's problem is "lack of F." The human analogy would be any of a number of things...we can't make ascorbic acid, so we have to eat it (vitamin C); we can't make any of the "vitamins" so we have to eat them. We can't make lysine, or a number of other amino acids, so we have to eat them. The best inferences we can make from the available data tell us that our distant could make these things, and we carry mutations that make us unable to. It's the same idea.

In any event, the important thing is to get away from seeing the diagrams as diagrams, and try to visualize the processes of things being converted into other things. It's hard to picture the actual chemicals, and even harder to picture enzymes realistically (but there are plenty of images if you need them and think they'd help). It's easier to think of legos, for the smiple reason that the chemicals that we (and everything else) are made of are relatively few in number; the enzymes mostly just take 'em apart and put 'em back together again in different arrangements.

In my view, this biochemistry stuff is really important--especially if we ever expect to engage in activities where knowing a bit about it would be helpful, like eating or having kids or getting sick or helping our parents as they age (I'm on number 5 now). I don't believe in memorizing the details (you can always look them up), but a general sense of what's going on is really helpful.
Still a little confused on this point. So, it would be you have to add just D? Or D and F? Or D and F and G? I guess if you added D, It would be like unplugging the hole in the chartreuse bucket, right? (I like the bucket analogy). So the reactions that came after it would still happen automatically, as long as D was put in. So you only need to add D? You said "D or F." But if you skipped D, wouldn't that miss something? Don't you still need to add D? Do you even need to add F at all?

Thank you so much for your help, guys!

And thanks for not lecturing me, Jose! :lol:
Keep me posted on how things are going.

--Jose
I'm afraid the plan right now is just to get the assignments done, so that I'm allowed to write the test (I'm on Assignment 2, and there are 4). Then, I have to write the test by the end of November, and I'm thinking I won't do very well. However, I learned that if I bomb the test, I can, for a fee, take it again in a couple of months, which I could use to study without all the panic about getting the assignments in. Now I just have to make sure I do that!

:-k :study: :?: :study: :yapyap: :roll: :censored: :writers_block: :?: :study: :sleepsleep: :study: :idea: :joy:
Last edited by Lainey on Mon Nov 06, 2006 10:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.

User avatar
Lainey
Scholar
Posts: 300
Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 12:38 pm
Location: Canada

Post #9

Post by Lainey »

Methylatedghosts wrote:
My assignment wrote:1. Consider the following hypothetical biochemical reactions, where E represents various enzymes and the other letters represent various reactants and products; then answer the questions below.

.......E1..........E2...........E3.........E4
A-------->B-------->C-------->D--------F
....................................\
.....................................\ E5
......................................\--------->G


I think this is how you mean the diagram looks like.

One question, if "G" comes down via E5, but after the "C", not directly from "C", does this mean "E3" is also required for "G" or no?

Seems to me that the question would otherwise have G coming straight off of "C".

Or am I just reading into it too much?
Almost, just move the E5 arrow back a little bit. In my diagram from my assignment, the E5 arrow is coming straight down from the beginning of the E3 arrow. I don't know if E3 is required for G. I think that's where my confusion is coming from. If it was coming down straight from C, I'd say no, but it's coming down just after C. But it's at the beginning of the E3 arrow, so it kind of looks like the E3 reaction hasn't started yet, so maybe it's not necessary for G?

I think Juliod answered this...I gotta go back and check.

User avatar
Jose
Guru
Posts: 2011
Joined: Thu Sep 02, 2004 4:08 pm
Location: Indiana

Post #10

Post by Jose »

OK, good! The diagram should look like your new drawing.

......E1..........E2..........E3.........E4
A-------->B-------->C--------D--------F
...............................\
................................\ E5
.................................\
...................................------>G
Lainey wrote:I figured if you shut down E2, everything after it wouldn't be formed. I would like to point out, Juliod, that I did figure that one out myself, and just needed clarification. :P
Hee hee. Juliod has a good point, as always. Clarification can come somewhat close to being told the answer. In any event, your new diagram makes it pretty clear. Knock out E2, and you've got this:

......E1.............X...........E3.........E4
A-------->B-------->C--------D--------F
...............................\
................................\ E5
.................................\
...................................------>G


You can make B just fine, but if you can't make C, then you can't make anything that uses C as a starting material. Since G is made from C, you can't make G. Without something for the enzymes to work on, they can't do anything, even if the enzymes are there.
Lainey wrote: Y'see, it's like when there's science involved, a wall goes up in my brain. I know the answer's out there somewhere, but I have to get over the wall first. ... That's a lot of stuff to digest. I looked at your animations, and they helped, but I do pretty much understand the idea of substrates and how enzymes work on them. It's just the chain reactions I have trouble with. So from what you and Juliod said, it actually looks like it's pretty easy. I think I was making it harder in my head than it has to be. There's that brick wall again. ](*,)
There's a lot of societal indoctrination that goes on, that leads certain flavors of people to expect to be able to do things easily or with difficulty. Math and science are subjects that women "aren't supposed to be good at" so we learn from an early age to think that's why we might have gotten stuck on some problem or other. There are similar societal expectations for various minority groups--some expected to be good at this, poor at that, and other groups being expected to be good at something else. It's all bunk, but the expectations alone are enough to create these brick walls. Here's an interesting experiment: give girls a math test--the computer-graded kind. Have some of 'em identify their gender at the beginning, by filling in the circle labeled "female." Have the other half fill in the same circle after they've finished the test. The ones who identify themselves as female after the test get better scores than the ones who identifiy their sex before the test. It's like that one little circle makes 'em think "uh-oh. I'm not supposed to be able to do this, so I'll get all the brick walls in place."

Brick walls are weird things. My wife describes them as windows that she can see through, but just when the picture is starting to get clear, they shut. In any event, if you hang in there, you'll find a way around the wall.
Lainey wrote:Still a little confused on this point. So, it would be you have to add just D? Or D and F? Or D and F and G? I guess if you added D, It would be like unplugging the hole in the chartreuse bucket, right? (I like the bucket analogy). So the reactions that came after it would still happen automatically, as long as D was put in. So you only need to add D? You said "D or F." But if you skipped D, wouldn't that miss something? Don't you still need to add D? Do you even need to add F at all?
(Reminder: we knock out E3, and can't make D, so we can't make F. By th bucket analogy, adding D would be like walking in and pouring Dark-red stuff (D) into the appropriate bucket that has the E4 hole in it. Then, the Dark-red stuff can be worked on by the E4 hole, and turned into F, the Flourescent, day-glow color that the whole A-B-C-D-F pathway is supposed to make.

You could, of course, add F directly--and the critters would get their F. They can make it from D if you give them D, or they can use F if you give them F. The way the diagram is presented, it looks like it implies that the important things for the critters are F and G--the end products of this set of reactions. If they can make G, but can't make F, then you've gotta give 'em F or something to make F from (i.e. D). Giving them more C wouldn't help, because they can't convert C to D because the enzyme that does so has been knocked out.

This is kinda what we do with Vitamin A. Mom always tells us to eat our carrots, so we can see better at night. The beta-carotene in 'em is used to produce retinal, the photopigment in our eyes. it's also the precursor to real vitamin A, retinoic acid. Think of the stuff in carrots (or other red and orange things) as the "D" in one of these pathways. We eat the "D" and our enzymes convert it into the active "F." It doesn't do us any good to eat, say, pyruvate, because we lack one or more of the enzymes to convert pyruvate to beta-carotene.

Speaking of pyruvate and enzyme pathways, check out Page 7 of my animations. There are a couple of glycolysis animations--one of which shows all the gory details of the chemicals involved, and the other attempts to illustrate the idea that the enzymes work on their substrates because they happen to fit the shapes of the enzymes. In this one, you move the enzymes around and try to make the reactions go--which they won't if the enzyme doesn't fit the substrate. This animation also tries to get at the idea that lots and lots and lots of reactions are going on all at once, and we can't describe anything at all without hiding most of what's there. If you go from page 7 to the interactive mitochondria animation, you'll see an oxygen molecule "suddenly appear" when it is needed. My students often say "and than oxygen appears" when they should, instead, see it as "oxygen is always there (if you're breathing), dissolved in the water of the cell, and when the appropriate enzyme grabs it, the enzyme uses it...but we can't show everything at once, so we'll only draw it in when it comes into play." Think of it as an ant colony, and we've gotta hide all of the ants except for the one we're watching, or else it's too messy to tell what's going on.

Here's another cute bit you should know: Enzymes don't waste time doing stuff they don't need to do. In our example of E1,2,3,4, and 5 making B,C,D,F, and G out of A, it wouldn't be at all surprising if the enzyme E1 has a pocket on it that compound F would fit into--and in doing so, slow down the reaction. E1 might have a second pocket that G can fit into, that would also slow E1 down. Usually, the first enzyme in a pathway is regulated this way--by the end product slowing it down. We'd draw it this way (using another arrow that means something completely different than any of the other arrows):
.........._____________________
........./..........................................\
.......V.............................................\
......E1..........E2..........E3.........E4.....\
A-------->B-------->C-------->D-------->F
...............................\
................................\ E5
.................................\
...................................------>G

I don't know if this looks right...it should be an arrow going back from F and pointing at E1. Another concept, another arrow! It would probably look better without the E5 and G in there, since most enzymes that are regulated this way are the first one in a pathway that makes only one product. Here, E1 is in a pathway that makes both F and G...but such things are not unknown.
t's just the chain reactions I have trouble with.
How about another analogy? To make a car, ya gotta have a bunch of steps, from the starting material to the finished product. Each step needs a worker (or machine) to do that step. That worker/machine is the analog of an enzyme in a multi-step pathway.

Digestion and metabolism of food might be another good example. You eat a potato. The starch molecules have to be broken down to glucose molecules before your digestive system can take them up. There's step one. Then there's transport into cells, using an appropriate transport enzyme. There's step 2. Then there's a bunch of reactions that happen, breaking the glucose down further--steps 3 through 13. At the end of this, you've got pyruvate.

Yippee!

Well, don't look at me that way! Pyruvate matters. You want bread? The yeast eat the sugar, make pyruvate, and then ferment it to CO2 and ethanol. The CO2 makes the bread rise. You want wine? Again, you use yeast, and it makes pyruvate, then ferments it to CO2 and ethanol. You leet the CO2 bubble away (unless you want beer or champagne, in which case you save some of the CO2 for carbonation). But, don't get any bacteria into the fermentation vat, 'cause they ferment pyruvate to lactic acid, and make the stuff taste bad. That is, after all, what happens when milk goes sour--bacteria eat the milk sugar, run it through glycolysis to pyruvate, then ferment it to lactic acid--sour milk. They do this because there's no air in bread dough, milk cartons, or fermentation vats--so they can't metabolize the pyruvate the way we do, using our mitochondria. In any event, you can get pretty far in the kitchen if you keep track of the pyruvate. :whistle:

Of course, the goal is not to make pyruvate, but to destroy the glucose and extract the energy that's in it--by capturing it in the formation of ATP. But we can talk about that later...
Panza llena, corazon contento

Post Reply