The substrate.
active site
The substrate fits inside the active site of the enzyme. when it fits perfectly its called " lock and key"
It is known as the active site.
The area where a molecule other than substrate can attach is called the allosteric site.
Denaturation
That is the active site. Substrate binds to it
active site
The substrate fits inside the active site of the enzyme. when it fits perfectly its called " lock and key"
isomer position
It is known as the active site.
The part of the enzyme where the substrate attaches itself to is known as the "active site". The active site of an enzyme is a part of the molecule that has just the right shape and functional groups to bind to one of the reacting molecules. The reacting molecule that binds to the enzyme is called the substrate.
The area where a molecule other than substrate can attach is called the allosteric site.
The active site of an enzyme is the site where substrates undergo the reaction specfic to that enzyme.
Called the active site.
Where the substrate and the enzyme fit is called the active site. There are substance that can inhibit this fit.Natural poisons are often enzyme inhibitors that have evolved to defend a plant or animal against predators. These natural toxins include some of the most poisonous compounds known.
Enzymes act on molecules called "substrates".
Allosterically modified