difference between activator and inhibitor
No, it is not true. PEP, or phosphoenolpyruvate, is actually a substrate for phosphofructokinase (PFK), a key enzyme in glycolysis. PEP is converted to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate by PFK, which is an important step in the glycolytic pathway.
No. Remember what "inhibit" means: to hold back; restrain. Both non-competitive and competitive inhibitors affect enzymes by preventing the substrate from binding, though they differ in their methods. The opposite of an inhibitor is called an activator. So when you see the word "inhibitor," you know the functionality of the enzyme will decrease, and when you see the word "activator," you know the functionality of the enzyme will increase. The adjective before "inhibitor" or "activator" will ultimately tell you how the enzyme is inhibited or activated.
PFK Piešťany was created in 1912.
Good Question ! PFK means "Pats Fried KitKat"
High levels of ATP inhibit PFK
it is the activator device
Pfk :-)
It's the cytoplasm only.
Well, unlike competitive inhibitors the non-competitive inhibitors will not compete the active site of the enzyme with substrate . Instead, it will combine with the enzyme somewhere except the ative site and alter the whole shape of the enzymes therefore the active site of substrate and enzyme are not the same and therefore no enzyme-substrate complex can be formed and the enzymatic effect can't be restored becausr the enzymes are now denatured
One can have the answer, when the league is completed for this year!
Phosphofructokinase (PFK)