Metabolism

Enzyme Kinetics: Vmax, Km, and Inhibition

Understand Michaelis-Menten kinetics, calculate Vmax and Km from experimental data, and compare competitive and non-competitive enzyme inhibitors.

V
Vectora Team
STEM Education
9 min read
2025-10-08

What are Enzymes?

Enzymes are biological catalysts — proteins that speed up reactions by lowering the activation energy (EaE_a). They are highly specific (lock-and-key or induced-fit model).

Learning Goals:

  1. Describe the Michaelis-Menten model of enzyme kinetics.
  2. Define and interpret Vmax and Km.
  3. Compare competitive and non-competitive inhibition.
  4. Explain factors affecting enzyme activity (temperature, pH).

Michaelis-Menten Kinetics

E+SESE+PE + S \rightleftharpoons ES \rightarrow E + P

The Michaelis-Menten equation:

v=Vmax[S]Km+[S]v = \frac{V_{max}[S]}{K_m + [S]}
ParameterMeaning
VmaxV_{max}Maximum reaction rate (all enzyme molecules saturated)
KmK_mSubstrate concentration at which v=Vmax/2v = V_{max}/2
[S][S]Substrate concentration

Low KmK_m = high affinity (enzyme binds substrate tightly). High KmK_m = low affinity.


Inhibition

FeatureCompetitiveNon-competitive
Binds toActive siteAllosteric site
Effect on VmaxV_{max}UnchangedDecreased
Effect on KmK_mIncreased (apparent)Unchanged
Overcome byIncreasing [S]Cannot be overcome
ExampleMethotrexateHeavy metal ions

Factors Affecting Enzyme Activity

FactorEffect
TemperatureRate ↑ to optimum (usually 37°C for human enzymes), then drops sharply (denaturation)
pHEach enzyme has an optimal pH; extremes denature
Substrate [S]Rate ↑ until VmaxV_{max} (enzyme saturation)
Enzyme [E]More enzyme → higher VmaxV_{max}

Worked Examples

Example 1: Interpreting a rate curve

If the reaction rate plateaus at 5 mmol/min → Vmax=5V_{max} = 5 mmol/min. The [S] where rate = 2.5 mmol/min → KmK_m for the enzyme.

Example 2: Drug design

Aspirin is a competitive inhibitor of cyclooxygenase (COX). It binds the active site, blocking the substrate (arachidonic acid) from entering → reduces prostaglandin synthesis → reduces inflammation.


Common Mistakes

  1. "Competitive inhibitors reduce VmaxV_{max}" — Wrong. With enough substrate, competitive inhibitors are outcompeted → VmaxV_{max} is unchanged.
  2. "Enzymes are used up in reactions" — Enzymes are catalysts — they're recycled and not consumed.
  3. Confusing denaturation with reversible inhibition — Denaturation permanently destroys tertiary structure; inhibition is usually reversible.

Exam Tips

  • On graphs: competitive inhibition shifts the curve right (higher apparent KmK_m); non-competitive shifts it down (lower VmaxV_{max}).
  • If asked "how would you increase the rate?": increase [S], increase [E], increase temperature (up to optimum), or remove inhibitors.
  • The Lineweaver-Burk plot (1/v1/v vs 1/[S]1/[S]) shows inhibition type more clearly: competitive changes x-intercept; non-competitive changes y-intercept.