Induction
The molecule upon which an enzyme acts is called the substrate.
The substance on which enzymes act are called substrates.
Generally in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction, the reactant is called the substrate, which in association with the enzyme forms the product.
A substrate is the substance acted upon by an enzyme. The enzyme substrate complex is when an enzyme molecule combines with its substrates.
The target molecule for an enzyme is called the substrate. Enzymes bind to specific substrates and catalyze chemical reactions to convert the substrate into a product.
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.
That is the active site. Substrate binds to it
its called a substrate
D. substrate (a specific reactant acted upon by an enzyme is called the enzyme's substrate.)
The substrate
The reactant that binds to an enzyme's active site is called a substrate.
Oh, dude, that substance is called a substrate. It's like the enzyme's favorite little project to work on. So, when the enzyme is like, "I need something to do," the substrate is there to keep it busy. It's a match made in biochemical heaven.