Yes, ATP can bind to enzymes as a substrate or a cofactor to facilitate enzymatic reactions. The binding of ATP provides energy for the reaction to occur by transferring a phosphate group to the substrate molecule.
ATP Synthase
Yes ATP is a co-enzyme.It is needed for some enzymes.
Hydrogen ions bind to the F0 subunit of ATP synthase during ATP synthesis. This binding causes the rotation of the ATP synthase complex, leading to the synthesis of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate.
The cross-bridge must bind to ATP in order to disconnect from actin. When ATP binds to the cross-bridge, it allows for the power stroke to occur, leading to the dissociation of the cross-bridge from actin.
Often enzymes require a cofactor in order for them to function as a catalyst
cellular proteins have an specific site where ATP can bind
No, enzymes do not require ATP for their catalytic activity.
ATP Synthase
I don't think so. A lot of them just bind to a substrate, and that enzyme-substrate complex naturally changes the shape via the interactions between the enzyme and the substrate alone, no ATP required.
ADP
Competitive inhibitors bind to the active site of enzymes, blocking the substrate from binding and inhibiting the enzyme's activity.
No, uncompetitive inhibitors do not bind to the active site of enzymes. They bind to a different site on the enzyme, causing a conformational change that prevents the substrate from binding to the active site.
enzyme complex
bind site
Enzymes thaat are sent through Krebs cycle and the ATP synthase are production of ATP. Enzymes are protein so really fats and carbs contain no enzymes
Yes ATP is a co-enzyme.It is needed for some enzymes.
The bind in the active site.