no they are same az
No, they are chemical.
This is essentially because bacterial cells and human cells are very different. Both bacterial and human cells use chemicals called enzymes to build their walls. Penicillin is the right chemical "shape" to chemically stick to part of the bacterial enzyme. When it does this, it stops the bacterial enzyme from working properly and this makes the bacterial cell walls weak. The weakened cell wall cannot withstand the outside pressure, it breaks up and the bacterial cell dies. Human cells are made by different types of enzymes with a different chemical shape that penecillin is unable to stick to so it cant stop the human enzymes from working. The human cell walls are thus unaffected by it and they remain strong.
human saliva contains 99% water . 1% contains electrolytes, mucus, anti bacterial compounds and some enzymes..
Methyl groups are attached to all bacterial genetic material to protect it from its own restriction enzymes.
In what human functions are enzymes involved
No, they are chemical.
This is essentially because bacterial cells and human cells are very different. Both bacterial and human cells use chemicals called enzymes to build their walls. Penicillin is the right chemical "shape" to chemically stick to part of the bacterial enzyme. When it does this, it stops the bacterial enzyme from working properly and this makes the bacterial cell walls weak. The weakened cell wall cannot withstand the outside pressure, it breaks up and the bacterial cell dies. Human cells are made by different types of enzymes with a different chemical shape that penecillin is unable to stick to so it cant stop the human enzymes from working. The human cell walls are thus unaffected by it and they remain strong.
human saliva contains 99% water . 1% contains electrolytes, mucus, anti bacterial compounds and some enzymes..
Methyl groups are attached to all bacterial genetic material to protect it from its own restriction enzymes.
In what human functions are enzymes involved
the bacterial cell reproduces the bacterial chromosome that the human gene codes for.
protect the bacterial cell
it has more human cells actually the human body has more bacterial cells. Although it may seem more likely that the human body would have more human cells than bacterial cells. -Vasillisa
There is a huge amount of enzyme types in the human body. We have digestive enzymes such as pepsinogen, cardiac enzymes such as Trop-I, liver enzymes such as GGT. If you are curious of enzymes in the human body I suggest you look at specific systems or organs. An example would be to ask the internets about "pancreatic enzymes".
synthesize the same proteins and enzymes
Human intestinal bacterial symbionts serve in the production of Vitamin K.
1 for bacterial cell to produce a human protein