D
Reaction B
Yes, it can. Specific areas on the larger enzyme molecule can interact with the substrate.
The molecule that an enzyme react with, works on, is called a substrate. The substrate varies from one enzyme to another. The active site is the 3-D shape on the enzyme where a substrate binds for the reaction to take place.
vagina
No substrate molecules can react on their own, however without enzymes this occurs at such a slow rate that, chemical reactions required to sustain life would not occur fast enough and the organism would die.
the enzyme is not the right shape for sucrose
Yes, it can. Specific areas on the larger enzyme molecule can interact with the substrate.
The molecule that an enzyme react with, works on, is called a substrate. The substrate varies from one enzyme to another. The active site is the 3-D shape on the enzyme where a substrate binds for the reaction to take place.
vagina
No substrate molecules can react on their own, however without enzymes this occurs at such a slow rate that, chemical reactions required to sustain life would not occur fast enough and the organism would die.
All molecule can react.
enzyme
the enzyme is not the right shape for sucrose
There is no such molecule as Ca2. Calcium is simply Ca. Calcium will most likely react with CO2 to produce Calcium oxide and carbon. 2Ca + CO2 --> 2CaO + C.
*Do enzymes react with jello?
pH - denatures the enzyme by altering the charges on the enzyme. This will affect the structure of the enzyme and its ability to function. Heat - will denature the enzyme by breaking its bonds. This will stop the enzyme from being able to bond to a specific substrate molecule. Cold - not enough energy to reach minimum amount of activation energy needed to undergo reaction. The enzyme will not be able to react on the substrate.
In order to do its work, an enzyme must unite - even if ever so briefly - with at least one of the reactants. In most cases, the forces that hold the enzyme and its substrate are noncovalent, an assortment of hydrogen bonds, ionic interactions and hydrophobic interactions. For more information, click the link on the left. Michaelis and MENTON have proposed a hypothesis called complex hypothesis the enzyme substrate compex is an intermediate or transiet complex and bonds involved H.bond vaner waals force sometimes 2 substrates can bind to an enzyme molecule and such reaction are callad as BISUBSTRATE REACTION.
The acidity and basicity of different parts of a molecule are important determining factors in various reactions. They determine where a molecule is likely to react when treated with a base or acid.