A palindrome indicates a statement that has the same meaning, whether read backward or forward.
A binding site is the outer part of the protein that is folded into a unique shape. It has to have this certain shape, otherwise the enzyme and substrate will not fit together. This is called a "lock and key" mechanism.
The actin filaments have a Ca+2 binding site.
Tropomysin
Troponin
tRNA molecules.
Binding site.
it i called an active site
The binding site is where a specific binding molecule and a specific receptor protein can combine. This combination can only occur at the binding site. All in the 9th grade text book
A binding site is the outer part of the protein that is folded into a unique shape. It has to have this certain shape, otherwise the enzyme and substrate will not fit together. This is called a "lock and key" mechanism.
eye
The actin filaments have a Ca+2 binding site.
You have Iron atoms in hemoglobin. This atom is the binding site for oxygen in case of hemoglobin.
The 2 mechanisms to alter protein shape are allosteric and covalent modulation. Allosteric: If the protein contains 2 binding sites, the noncovalent binding of a ligand to one site can alter the shape & characteristics of the other site. -One binding site on an allosteric protein, the functional site, carries out the proteins physiological functions. -The other binding site is the regulatory site, and the ligand that binds to it is called the modulator molecule because it changes the shape! Covalent: Covalent bonding of charged chemical groups to some of the proteins side chains changes the shape and characteristics of the protein. Usually a phosphate group is covalently bonded, in the reaction called phosphorylation.
Tropomysin
Troponin
tRNA has two binding sites on the ribosome first one is A-site (aninoacyl -tRNA binding site), and second one is P-site (peptidyl-tRNA binding site) and E-site (Exit site)
Active site.