active sites
Yes, it can. Specific areas on the larger enzyme molecule can interact with the substrate.
substrate
The molecule upon which an enzyme acts is called the substrate.
The molecule that an enzyme react with, works on, is called a substrate. The substrate varies from one enzyme to another. The active site is the 3-D shape on the enzyme where a substrate binds for the reaction to take place.
Is a molecule upon which an enzyme acts. e.g. hydrogen peroxide is the substrate for the enzyme catalase
Yes, it can. Specific areas on the larger enzyme molecule can interact with the substrate.
substrate
A substrate is the substance acted upon by an enzyme. The enzyme substrate complex is when an enzyme molecule combines with its substrates.
The substance on which enzymes act are called substrates.
The molecule upon which an enzyme acts is called the substrate.
The molecule that an enzyme react with, works on, is called a substrate. The substrate varies from one enzyme to another. The active site is the 3-D shape on the enzyme where a substrate binds for the reaction to take place.
Is a molecule upon which an enzyme acts. e.g. hydrogen peroxide is the substrate for the enzyme catalase
They are known as reactants or substrates.
The substrate is the molecule(s) that an enzyme works on
That is the active site. Substrate binds to it
It is called competitive Inhibition.
The part of the enzyme where the substrate attaches itself to is known as the "active site". The active site of an enzyme is a part of the molecule that has just the right shape and functional groups to bind to one of the reacting molecules. The reacting molecule that binds to the enzyme is called the substrate.