Glutamate dehydrogenase an mitochondrial enzyme helps in oxidative deamination of glutamate
It helps to take out the ammonium group from glutamate to make it available for urea synthesis
Oxidative enzyme is an enzyme that catalyzes the reaction of oxides. There are two types of oxidative enzymes, which are the peroxidases and oxidases.
An aspartase is an enzyme which catalyzes the deamination of aspartic acid to fumaric acid and ammonia.
Dopamine is primarily degraded by the enzyme monoamine oxidase (MAO), specifically MAO-B, which catalyzes its oxidative deamination. This process converts dopamine into its inactive metabolites, such as homovanillic acid. Therefore, it can be said that dopamine is degraded rather than oxidized in the context of MAO activity.
The enzyme that catalyzes transcription is called RNA polymerase.
The enzyme that catalyzes transcription in cells is called RNA polymerase.
Deamination primarily occurs in the liver, although it can also occur in the kidneys and intestine. Enzymes such as amino acid oxidases and dehydrogenases are involved in the process of removing amino groups from amino acids to produce ammonia.
In biology it is an enzyme.
An angiotensin converting enzyme is an enzyme which catalyzes the creation of angiotensin.
an enzyme is protien that catalyzes chemical reactions for organisms
The enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of a phosphate group from ATP to a protein is called a protein kinase.
The enzyme that catalyzes the digestion of peptides in the small intestine is pepsin. Pepsin is released by the mucosal lining of the stomach.
Catalase is an enzyme found in liver cells that catalyzes the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide, a toxic byproduct of metabolic processes, into water and oxygen. This reaction helps protect cells from oxidative damage caused by hydrogen peroxide accumulation. By facilitating this breakdown, catalase plays a crucial role in maintaining cellular health and preventing oxidative stress in the liver.