Substrates
*Do enzymes react with jello?
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.
The enzymes in the body are probably get destroyed by the antiseptics. Antiseptics are usually poisons for humans also and they ruthlessly kill the bacteria.
Enzymes do not heat up molecules to make them react. Instead, enzymes lower the activation energy required for a reaction to occur, thus speeding up the reaction by providing an alternative pathway. This allows reactions to happen at a biologically relevant temperature without the need for additional heat.
no, enzymes are very specific with respect to stereo-chemistry and usually is active only to one enantiomer
Enzymes that help them react do not work at normal body temperatures
Enzymes work on one substrate specifically. This is why there is millions of different types of enzymes to interact with all the molecules they need to metabolically and chemically react with.
enzyme B stays effective at higher temperatures than enzymes A
Enzymes. Substrates react with the active site of the enzyme and are broken down. Enzymes stay the same throughout the reaction.
Enzymes that help them react do not work at normal body temperatures
Enzymes that help them react do not work at normal body temperatures
Enzymes that help them react do not work at normal body temperatures