Yes, it can. Specific areas on the larger enzyme molecule can interact with the substrate.
An enzyme will alter its substrate although the specific substrate depends on the enzyme.
The substrate is the molecule(s) that an enzyme works on
The reason why an enzyme fits a specific substrate is due to its 3rd dimensional shape. Enzymatic competition involves competition among several different available enzymes to combine with a given substrate material.
The enzyme substrate complex
At low concentration of substrate , rate of enzyme action is directly proportional to conc. of substrate .
in an enzyme-substrate complex, the enzyme acts on the substrate .
enzyme-substrate complex
Catalase is an enzyme and enzymes work best with a specific substrate. The enzyme can work with any substrate just not as efficient .
The binding of an enzyme and a substrate forms an enzyme-substrate complex. It lowers the activation energy of a chemical reaction
NO. The enzyme acts on the substrate. The substrate is the chemical/compound being altered by the action of the enzyme. They are NOT the same.
A substrate is the substance acted upon by an enzyme. The enzyme substrate complex is when an enzyme molecule combines with its substrates.
a substrate =================================== or an "interacting molecule".
complex
An enzyme will alter its substrate although the specific substrate depends on the enzyme.
The substrates are converted into products, which are released.
Generally in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction, the reactant is called the substrate, which in association with the enzyme forms the product.
A substrate is when the enzyme can only join onto certain substances