With a lot of heat, the enzyme will be denatured meaning it will lose its shape and therefore its function.
Each enzyme has its ideal temperature
Each enzyme has its ideal temperature
Yes because if the heat is to hot it can damage the enzymes
With a lot of heat, the enzyme will be denatured meaning it will lose its shape and therefore its function.
thetons absorb the excess heat
Excess heat or temperature can denature an enzyme, altering its shape and disrupting its active site. This can result in loss of enzyme function and decreased catalytic activity. Ultimately, high temperatures can render the enzyme nonfunctional.
This is school work. You need to open the book to find the answer.
Heat would make most enzymes unnecessary as added heat would allow (many) reaction to achieve activation energy without the need of a helping enzyme. In a biological system most enzymes are proteins and as heat denatures proteins the effect would be to destroy their functionality.
Enzymes are highly specific and accelerate chemical reactions without raising the temperature of the organism's cells. Heat, on the other hand, can denature proteins and damage cells. Enzymes function efficiently at the organism's normal temperature, making them essential for the regulation of metabolic processes.
When you excercise you generate excess heat and your body temperature rises. Blood vessels dialate in the skin, warm blood flows closer to the body surface, and you loose heat this exceplifies what
As temperature increases, the rate of enzymatic reactions will increase as well, up to the point where the heat becomes too great and the enzymes denature, making them unable to catalyze reactions any longer.
Any matter right in carbon can be converted to diamonds with sufficient heat and pressure. This implies using the high-pressure high temperature method. Temperature in excess of 1,500C and pressure in excess of 45,000bars. To put that in American terms, that would be temperature in excess of 2,700F (about the temperature at which steel melts) and pressure in excess of 30,000 tons per square inch.