DNA
Shape of an enzyme specifically shape of its active site determines enzyme specificity .
Weak hydrogen bond that form between some amino acids help to determine the three-dimensional shape.
The function of an enzyme is dependent on the shape of the enzyme. The structure and shape determines what the enzyme can do.
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The order of amino acids for each protein determines its final three-dimensional shape
The gene sequence determines the codon, which in turn determines the aminoacid, which in turn determines the tridimensional shape on the protein, which in turn determines the shape of the active site, which in turn determines what it'll be catalysing.
The feature of an enzyme that determines its chemical process it aids is it's shape. This can be compared to a lock and key. Where an enzyme, as the key, must have a certain structure or multi-dimensional shape that matches a specific section of the substrate, the compound or substance that undergoes the change.
Its composition and physical structure - this is determined by the DNA/RNA that coded for it.
A nonprotein compound that combines with an inactive enzyme to form an active enzyme system.
The inactive form of pepsin is called pepsinogen.
There are several things that determine an enzyme's activity. The main determinants include the structure of the enzyme, temperature, pH and so much more.
complex