What are competitive and non-competitve inhibitors?

Inhibitors INHIBIT the ACTIVITY OF ENZYMES. This means fewer enzymes are able to break up substrate, and so whatever reaction is taking place, slows down. Inhibitors can be found for example, in poison or insecticides, and may be used in drugs.

COMPETITIVE INHIBITORS:

1 - These have a similar structure to the substrate, so will bind to the ACTIVE SITE of the enzyme.

2 - The best way to remember them, is to know that they COMPETE with the substrate.

3 - This then means fewer ENZYME-SUBSTRATE COMPLEXES form, and the reaction slows.

NON-COMPETITIVE INHIBITORS

1- These are called 'non-competitive' simply because they DO NOT COMPETE with the substrate for the active site of the enzyme.

2- Instead, they bind to another part of the enzyme called a BINDING SITE. When they do this, this changed the structure of the enzyme, resulting in the shape of the ACTIVE SITE changing.

3- The active site is no longer a complementary shape to the substrate, so fewer ENZYME-SUBSTRATE COMPLEXES can form.

AH
Answered by Anna H. Biology tutor

4966 Views

See similar Biology A Level tutors

Related Biology A Level answers

All answers ▸

People who have McArdie's disease produce less ATP than healthy people. As a result, they are not able to maintain strong muscle contraction during exercise. Use your knowledge of the sliding filament theory to suggest why (AQA BIOL5)


what is the advantage of having a large surface area?


How does the heart work to pump blood around the body?


What happens during transcription and translation?


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2025 by IXL Learning