It denotes an enzyme
-ose, as in fructose, glucose, lactose, etc.
The ending -ase in biology and biochemistry is indicative of an enzyme. Major enzymes include lipase, lactase, maltase and sucrase.
The ending ase indicates that the substance is a catalyst.
The atomic complexity of proteins quickly bogs down the chemical naming process called 'Nomenclature'. Another has provided this example: (C44189h71252n12428o14007s321). This situation is overcome by the use of names, or Language. For example, every time the name of a biochemical contains the suffix -ase, this denotes that this moiety is an enzyme.
Modern enzymes are usually named by incorporating the name of the polymer hydrolyzed and the suffix "-ase". So following those rules, the enzyme that breaks down lactose is lactase.
Enzymes are proteins that catalyze or increase the rates of chemical reactions and ends with -ase. ase.. is the suffex for the name of Enzymes as.... Diastase , Zymase , oxidase, reductase etc.........
The name of an enzyme.
ASE
ase
-ose, as in fructose, glucose, lactose, etc.
Typically, any macro-biomolecule whose name ends with the suffix -ase is an enzyme.
Enzymes. The name of an enzyme usually ends with an -ase, and start with the substrate it works with.
Race chase and case
In 1833, French chemistAnselme Payendiscovered the first enzyme which brake down starch intosugar. he named this diastase which mean inLatin seeding a part ( dia-stasis)since then the -ase (from diastase) was used torefertoenzymaticactivity.
ase' is from the Yoruba language of West Africa and it means "so let it be."
Do you mean asi? It is pronounced like "ah-see". If so, it means, "like this".
Enzyme