Active site
In the induced-fit model of enzymes, a substrate associates itself with which part of an enzyme?
The active site is where the substrate binds to the enzyme. It is a region on the enzyme where the chemical reaction takes place. The active site is specific to the substrate molecule, allowing for precise catalysis to occur.
The substrate is the molecule that binds to the active site of an enzyme. The active site is a region on the enzyme where the substrate binds and undergoes a chemical reaction. The specificity of the active site allows only certain substrates to bind and react with the enzyme.
At the active site. The substrate is held in the active site by "weak interactions" such as hydrogen bonds and ionic bonds.
The active site is the part of the enzyme that binds with the substrate. It is where the catalytic activity of the enzyme takes place. The active site is specific to the substrate, allowing for selective binding and catalysis.
A region on an enzyme that binds to a protein or other substance during a reaction
substrate
The substrate is the substance (or substances) that attaches to the enzyme's active site before the reaction occurs.The product is the substance (or substances) that is formed after the enzyme has worked on the substrate.///
When a substrate fits into the active site of an enzyme, an enzyme-substrate complex is formed. This complex allows for the enzyme to catalyze a specific chemical reaction on the substrate.
The most important part of the enzyme- where the chemical reactions happen. Substrates fit into the active site and are broken down or catalysed into end products (this is called the lock and key model).
An active site. Sometimes the active site can be disabled from inhibitors.
When an enzyme and substrate come together, it is called the enzyme-substrate complex. This complex is a temporary intermediate state in which the enzyme binds to the substrate to catalyze a chemical reaction.