Metabolic pathways consist of chains and cycles of enzyme-catalysed reactions.
Enzymes lower the activation energy of the chemical reactions that they catalyse.
Enzyme inhibitors can be competitive or non-competitive. [Enzyme inhibition should be studied using one specific example for competitive and non-competitive inhibition.]
Metabolic pathways can be controlled by end-product inhibition.
End-product inhibition of the pathway that converts threonine to isoleucine.
Use of databases to identify potential new anti-malarial drugs.
Calculating and plotting rates of reaction from raw experimental results.
Distinguishing different types of inhibition from graphs at specified substrate concentration.