7. a) In an enzyme catalyzed reaction which follows the Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The substrate ...
An enzyme that follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics has a initial velocity of 300 nM/s at a substrate concentration of 30 uM. The maximum velocity of 400 nM/sec. What is the Km for this enzyme in uM? (Give your answer as a number only. Type your response
The kinetics of enzyme catalyzed reactions can be described the Michaelis-Menten equation and the Eadie-Hofstee equation as shown below: V0 = (-Km) V0 / [S] + Vmax a). Please derive the Eadie-Hofstee equation starting from the Michaelis-Menten equation. b). The Vmax and Km of the enzyme catalyzed reaction can be derived from a plot of V0 versus V0/[S]. Please draw one of these plots and explain how do you use it to derive Vmax and Km. c). Please draw a...
The Michaelis-Menten equation is often used to describe the kinetic characteristics of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction. S Where v is the velocity or rate, Vmax is the maximum velocity, Km is the +IST Michaelis- Menten constant, and I5 s the substrate concentration. K + S v (uM/min) a) A graph of the Michaelis-Menten equation is a plot of a reaction's initial velocity (Vo) at different substrate concentrations ([S]) 300 Vmax 250 1/2 Vmax First, move the line labeled "Vmax to a...
For an enzyme that displays Michaelis-Menten kinetics, what is the reaction velocity v (as a percentage of Vmax) ,observed at each of the following substrate concentrations. (Ex, v = xVmax, where x = an integer, fraction, or decimal number (two decimal places)) a) [S] = 0.1 Km _________ b) [S] = 2 Km _________ c) [S] = 10 Km _________
4. Basic concepts of Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The Michaelis-Menten equation is expression of the relationship between the initial velocity, Vo, of an enzymatic reaction and substrate concentration, [S]. There are three conditions that are useful for simplifying the Michaelis-Menten equation: [S] <<Km; [S] = Km; [S] >> Km. Match each condition with the statement(s) that describe it. TV, Vmox[S] Vo =Vmax m . V Vo - Vmax [S] Km +[S] V. (um/min) max [S] (mm) (a) Doubling [S] will almost double...
Assuming that an enzyme catalyzed reaction follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics with a Km of 1 x 10-6 M. If the initial reaction rate (V0) is 0.1 μmol/min at 0.1 M, what would it be at 0.01 M, 10-3M, and 10-6 M?
The relation between Reaction Velocity and Substrate Concentration: Michaelis-Menten Equation a) At what substrate concentration would an enzyme with a kcat of 30.0 s-1 and a Km of 0.0050 M operate at one-quarter of its maximum rate? b) Determine the fraction of Vmax that would be obtained at the following substrate concentrations: [S]=Km/2, [S]=2Km, [S]=10Km
What is the velocity of a Michaelis-Menten enzyme reaction (in terms of vmax) when the concentration of substrate is 4 times the value of KM? Show your work.
For an enzyme that follows the Michaelis-Menten kinetic, what substrate concentrations (relative to Km) are needed for the speed of the reaction to be 0.12 there vmax 0.25 there vmax 0.5 there vmax 0.9 there vmax.
Part A An enzyme that follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics has a KM value of 10.0 uM and a kcat value of 201 s-1. At an initial enzyme concentration of 0.0100 uM, the initial reaction velocity was found to be 1.07 x 10- uM/s. What was the initial concentration of the substrate, [S], used in the reaction ? Express your answer in micromolar to three significant figures. ► View Available Hint(s) PO ALO O O ? [S]; = MM UM