Q41. Match the parameters in Group 1 with the correct options in Group 2 Group 1 Group 2 P. Km Q. kcat/Km R. pKa S. Ki 1. Catalytic efficiency of the enzyme 2. Affinity of enzyme to the inhibitor 3. Affinity of enzyme to the substrate 4. Maximum buffering capacity (A) P-3, Q-1, R-2, S-4 (B) P-3, Q-1, R-4, S-2 (C) P-1, Q-2, R-4, S-3 (D) P-1, Q-4, R-2, S-3

Q41. Match the parameters in Group 1 with the correct options in Group 2

Group 1 Group 2
P. Km
Q. kcat/Km
R. pKa
S. Ki
1. Catalytic efficiency of the enzyme
2. Affinity of enzyme to the inhibitor
3. Affinity of enzyme to the substrate
4. Maximum buffering capacity



Correct Answer: (B) P-3, Q-1, R-4, S-2

Km reflects enzyme-substrate affinity, with lower values indicating stronger binding. kcat/Km measures catalytic efficiency, combining turnover rate and substrate affinity. pKa relates to buffering capacity, peaking at maximum proton donation/acceptance. Ki indicates inhibitor affinity, where lower values mean tighter binding.

Parameter Matching

  • P. Km → 3. Affinity of enzyme to the substrate: Km is the substrate concentration at half Vmax; high Km means low affinity as more substrate is needed.

  • Q. kcat/Km → 1. Catalytic efficiency of the enzyme: This ratio shows how effectively enzymes convert substrate to product, especially at low concentrations.

  • R. pKa → 4. Maximum buffering capacity: Buffers resist pH change best at their pKa, providing peak capacity there.

  • S. Ki → 2. Affinity of enzyme to the inhibitor: Lower Ki values denote higher inhibitor binding strength, similar to Km for substrates.

Option Analysis

Option P (Km) Q (kcat/Km) R (pKa) S (Ki) Correct? Reason
(A) 3 1 2 4 No R wrongly matches inhibitor affinity; pKa is buffering.
(B) 3 1 4 2 Yes All match: substrate affinity, efficiency, buffering, inhibitor affinity.
(C) 1 2 4 3 No P confuses Km with efficiency; Q mismatches inhibitor.
(D) 1 4 2 3 No Multiple errors: Km not efficiency, kcat/Km not buffering.

Introduction to Enzyme Kinetics Parameters Matching

Enzyme kinetics parameters matching like Km, kcat/Km, pKa, and Ki is crucial for GATE Life Sciences aspirants tackling biochemistry MCQs. This guide solves a classic PYQ on matching these terms to their definitions—substrate affinity, catalytic efficiency, buffering capacity, and inhibitor affinity—helping students ace competitive exams.

Understanding Km: Enzyme-Substrate Affinity

Km, or Michaelis constant, measures enzyme affinity for substrate. Lower Km signals higher affinity, as less substrate reaches half Vmax. In kinetics, it’s key for plotting Michaelis-Menten curves.

kcat/Km: Measure of Catalytic Efficiency

kcat/Km, the specificity constant, gauges catalytic efficiency. It reflects turnover (kcat) normalized by Km, ideal for low-substrate conditions in vivo. High values mean superior performance.

pKa and Maximum Buffering Capacity

pKa denotes the pH where acids/bases half-dissociate, yielding maximum buffering capacity. Enzymes and buffers optimize here to stabilize pH in reactions.

Ki: Enzyme-Inhibitor Affinity

Ki is the inhibition constant; low Ki indicates strong inhibitor binding, akin to Km but for competitive/non-competitive inhibitors in drug design.

GATE Exam Tips

Practice matching enzyme kinetics parameters matching Km kcat/Km for quick scoring. Use Lineweaver-Burk plots to visualize differences.

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