Enzyme Inhibitors
- Inhibitors are chemical substances that can bind to an enzyme and reduce its activity
- Inhibitors can be formed from within the cell or can be introduced from the external environment
- An enzyme's activity can be reduced or stopped, temporarily, by an inhibitor
- There are two types of inhibitors: competitive and non-competitive
Competitive inhibitors
- Competitive inhibitors have a similar shape to that of the substrate molecules
- They bind to the active site of the enzyme, interfering with it and competing with the substrate for the active site
- The substrate, therefore, cannot bind to the active site if a competitive inhibitor is already bound
Non-competitive inhibitors
- Non-competitive inhibitors bind to the enzyme at an alternative site, which alters the shape of the active site
- This therefore prevents the substrate from binding to the active site
Competitive and non-competitive inhibition
Examples of competitive and non-competitive inhibitors
- An example of a competitive inhibitor involves the enzyme RuBisCo, an important carbon fixation enzyme in photosynthesis
- Oxygen is a competitive inhibitor to this enzyme and blocks the active site for carbon dioxide
- Therefore carbon dioxide cannot bind to RuBisCo and reactions involved in photosynthesis slow down or cease to occur
- This can be fatal to the plant
- An example of a non-competitive inhibitor involves the enzyme cytochrome c oxidase, a mitochondrial enzyme that catalyses one of the key reactions in aerobic respiration
- Cyanide ions are a non-competitive inhibitor that binds to a site on the enzyme and change the shape of the active site
- Therefore cytochrome c oxidase cannot carry out its functions in respiration
- This can be fatal as it takes too long to produce new enzymes and the organism will die before this can occur
- Cyanide is known as a metabolic poison because it interferes with metabolic pathways
Table comparing competitive and non-competitive inhibitors