Enzymes catalyze reactions, which means they speed them up, so and enzyme can be a part of making a compound, but won't necessarily be the thing making it. Does that make sense?
amylase has enzymes, but enzymes are not an organic compound. The four types of organic compounds would be lipids, nucleic acids carbohydrates and protein. Your body makes enzymes and amylase, and anything your body make is a protein. Therefore your answer is a protein.
False . Catalysts can be many things ; enzymes and transition elements and their compounds , for example .So Enzymes are always catalysts but Catalysts are NOT always enzymes .
An azoreductase is any of a family of enzymes which catalyze the conversion of diamines to azo compounds.
Proteins.
Two organic compounds that act as enzymes are maltase and amylase. Amylase is involved in the breakdown of starch into disaccharides and trisaccharides, which are then broken down into glucose by other enzymes. Maltase is involved in the breakdown of the disaccharide maltose, a disaccharide formed when starch is broken down.
Enzymes are Protein in Nature. Proteins are more precisely described as biochemical compounds. Some enzymes are combined with Rna's to form for example - Ribozymes. Enzymes, while completely composed from Organic Protein, are 'merely' one Form of Protein.
These compounds are called enzymes.
enzymes
All compounds can be broken down without enzymes. Most just take a REALLY long time. Enzymes speed up the process.
These compounds are called enzymes.
Yes. Nearly all enzymes are proteins, and proteins are organic compounds.
Enzymes
Most are proteins.
amylase has enzymes, but enzymes are not an organic compound. The four types of organic compounds would be lipids, nucleic acids carbohydrates and protein. Your body makes enzymes and amylase, and anything your body make is a protein. Therefore your answer is a protein.
Protiens
They are known as biochemical enzymes.
Protiens