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fit into the active site on the enzyme
No; enzymes have substrate specificity, which means the substrate has to be a specific shape for the enzyme to bind to it.
yes.
Active site
Promoter
The activation site of an enzyme can only bind to a specific substrate.
fit into the active site on the enzyme
No; enzymes have substrate specificity, which means the substrate has to be a specific shape for the enzyme to bind to it.
yes.
enzyme works as a catalyst before and after the reaction it is preserved
cellular proteins have an specific site where ATP can bind
each enzyme has a specific substrate to which it binds through a definite active site and any other enzyme can not bind to it
The bind in the active site.
What? Enzyme doent look for another enzmes active site! it just look for its substrate to bind at in its active site! This will in turn make it to form any by products or convert it from the actual state!
Substrates
separate-restriction endonucleasis bind-ligases
An enzyme is a biological catalyst that speeds up chemical reactions by lowering the activation energy required for the reaction to occur. Enzymes are usually proteins that bind to specific molecules called substrates and help convert them into products.