GRE Subject Test: Biochemistry, Cell, and Molecular Biology : Enzymes

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for GRE Subject Test: Biochemistry, Cell, and Molecular Biology

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Example Questions

Example Question #61 : Biochemistry

You have an enzyme solution and you add an inhibitor molecule and observe a marked decrease in enzyme activity. You increase the substrate concentration but this does not lead to any observable increase in enzyme activity. What can you conclude about your inhibitor?

Possible Answers:

That it is a competitive inhibitor

That it binds the enzyme's active site

That it is a noncompetitive inhibitor

That is it an inorganic inhibitor

That it is a kinase

Correct answer:

That it is a noncompetitive inhibitor

Explanation:

Noncompetitive inhibitors bind to enzymes away from the active site (allosteric) and distort it, reducing its affinity for substrate. Since they do not directly compete with substrate for enzyme binding, increasing the substrate concentration in the presence of a noncompetitive inhibitor will have no affect. While enzyme inhibitors include both organic and inorganic molecules, there is not enough information in the question stem to conclude the chemical classification of the inhibitor.

Example Question #21 : Enzymes

How do competitive inhibitors affect enzyme efficiency?

Possible Answers:

Raise the maximum rate of the enzymatic reaction

Raise the Michaelis constant

Lower the Michaelis constant

Lower the maximum rate of the enzymatic reaction

Correct answer:

Raise the Michaelis constant

Explanation:

Competitive inhibitors can be overpowered by introducing excess substrate, so they do not affect the maximum rate of the enzyme. They do, however, make it so that more substrate is required in order to get the enzyme working at half of its maximum rate. As a result, competitive inhibitors act by raising the Michaelis constant of enzymes.

Example Question #22 : Enzymes

How does a noncomeptitive inhibitor affect an enzyme?

Possible Answers:

Raises the maximum rate of the enzymatic reaction

Raises the Michaelis constant of the enzyme

Lowers the Michaelis constant of the enzyme

Lowers the maximum rate of the enzymatic reaction

Correct answer:

Lowers the maximum rate of the enzymatic reaction

Explanation:

A noncompetitive inhibitor acts to decrease how fast the enzyme can act on substrates. It accomplishes this by lowering the maximum rate at which it can create products. Noncompetitive inhibitors do not alter the enzyme's Michaelis constant.

Example Question #23 : Enzymes

How is pepsinogen activated in the stomach?

Possible Answers:

Cofactors bind to the enzyme, increasing its efficiency

A portion is cleaved, activating the enzyme

It is phosphorylated by another enzyme

It is activated by the temperature change in the stomach lumen

Correct answer:

A portion is cleaved, activating the enzyme

Explanation:

Once in the stomach lumen, pepsinogen finds itself in a very acidic environment. The acidic environment cleaves an amino acid sequence from pepsinogen, turning it into the active enzyme pepsin. This type of activation causes pepsin to only activate in the stomach lumen where it is needed.

All GRE Subject Test: Biochemistry, Cell, and Molecular Biology Resources

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