Ultimately, the unique sequence of amino acids making up the primary polypeptide chain. The R group interactions give the protein it's tertiary shape.
The function of an enzyme is dependent on the shape of the enzyme. The structure and shape determines what the enzyme can do.
it determines how the molecule functions
enzymes are still functional after losing their shape as they depend onn their shape
Yes, enzymes are proteins and it is their sequence of amino acids (primary structure) that determines what kind of an enzyme it is and makes all the enzymes unique and it is the tertiary structure of enzymes that maintains their shape and give rise to the unique active site. When an enzyme is denatured, it loses its tertiary structure and therefore its 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 function of an enzyme is dependent on the shape of the enzyme. The structure and shape determines what the enzyme can do.
The temperature in which the enzymes are effects the effectiveness of enzymes. Enzymes work best at a temperature of 37 which is the body temperature.
it determines how the molecule functions
The container determines the shape.
enzymes are still functional after losing their shape as they depend onn their shape
The shape and size of the enzyme determines it's function because they're extremely specific. An enzyme will only work with one type of substrate.
A sphere.
Enzymes that are sensitive to changes in their physical or chemical environment, such as changes in pH or temperature will change their shape if placed in suboptimal environments. Most enzymes are proteins, and it's a protein's shape that determines their function. Change the shape, and the enzyme is denatured, and can no longer function for its purpose adequately.
The active site is part of an enzyme where substrates bind and undergo a chemical reaction.
It disrupts an enzymes shape and structure.
Yes, enzymes are proteins and it is their sequence of amino acids (primary structure) that determines what kind of an enzyme it is and makes all the enzymes unique and it is the tertiary structure of enzymes that maintains their shape and give rise to the unique active site. When an enzyme is denatured, it loses its tertiary structure and therefore its 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.