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Sporangiophores
In Sporangium
Conidiophores are produced by ascomycetes whereas sporangiophores are produced by zygomycetes. Conidia bud off the conidium (the conidiophore is the stalk-like structure that holds the conidium up) and eventually get dispersed by the wind. Sporangiophores are what you see on bread molds - they have the sporangia (sac like structures) which hold the spores. That bursts open and releases all the spores at the same time.
During the pay-off phase of glycolysis.During the Krebs phase, ATP is produced directly by substrate-level phosphorylation. ATP stands for adenosine triphosphate.
The enzyme substrate complex
Sporangiophores
Vmax is the maximum possible rate that can be achieved by the addition of substrate. It levels off at v max because availability of substrate is no longer a limiting factor. Km is defined by 1/2 of Vmax. In reality Vmax levels off but then the curve goes down once substrate concentration increases viscosity.
A subtrate is a reactant an enzyme acts off of. This fits into the active site and turns into the products
In Sporangium
in an enzyme-substrate complex, the enzyme acts on the substrate .
Substrate.
enzyme-substrate complex
The binding of an enzyme and a substrate forms an enzyme-substrate complex. It lowers the activation energy of a chemical reaction
Substrate.
the substrate for lyase is sucrase
Urea which is protein substrate
Conidiophores are produced by ascomycetes whereas sporangiophores are produced by zygomycetes. Conidia bud off the conidium (the conidiophore is the stalk-like structure that holds the conidium up) and eventually get dispersed by the wind. Sporangiophores are what you see on bread molds - they have the sporangia (sac like structures) which hold the spores. That bursts open and releases all the spores at the same time.