Chemical Forums
Chemistry Forums for Students => Undergraduate General Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: amand79 on March 25, 2020, 08:00:07 AM
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Hi, I don't understand the part in bold about the Michaelis-Menton kinetic model of catalysis, could someone please try and explain it?
Michaelis-Menton Mechanism
E = enzyme, S = substrate, P = product
Step 1) E + S -> ES [fast, reversible]
Step 2) ES -> E + P [slow, rate-determining] • The substrate binds to the enzyme at the active site to form an enzyme-substrate complex (ES). ES then reacts to form the product in the slow rate determining step. •WhenEa =0 and steric factor A=1 reactions are diffusion controlled - this is as fast as a reaction can go. For 2 molecules of the same size diffn control gives rates which approach the encounter frequency of 7 x 109 s-1 M-1.
• Many enzyme systems approach this rate.
eg. acetylcholinesterase k =1.6 x 109 s-1 M-1
Thank you
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Welcome to the forum. One, in general you must give us your thoughts before we can help you. That is a Forum Rule (see red link above). Two, you can use your textbook and search this term yourself and get a good start. Three, your question is broad, making it difficult to answer. It might refer either to the Michaelis complex or to the Michaelis-Menten equation and its derivation. My suggestion is that you reframe your question in a way that makes it more focused and provide what you think the answer is and why.