because the lysosome cannot release its contents unless nearby cells allow it.
Corn has a tough outer layer called the hull that your body can't fully digest. This hull protects the inside of the corn kernel as it travels through your digestive system, so it remains intact when you eliminate it.
The Golgi Apparatus aka Golgi Complex produces lysozomes which will combine with it and digest them. If you are wondering what a Golgi Apparatus is then it is basically a "warehouse" to store and export proteins. The proteins come from the ribosomes which creates them.
Enzyme will catalyse when the substrate come close enough to interact with enzyme's active site (proximity and orientation). The rate of enzymatic reactions is influenced by the condition such as temperature or pH that favors the chemical environment, and when a co-factor is already bound (not for all enzymes).
Factors such as temperature, pH, substrate concentration, and the presence of inhibitors or activators can affect how enzymes and substrates come together. Changes in these factors can alter the shape and activity of enzymes, impacting their ability to bind with substrates and catalyze reactions.
Oligomeric enzymes are enzymes composed of multiple subunits that come together to form an active enzyme complex. These subunits can be identical or different, and their arrangement is crucial for the enzyme's function. The oligomeric structure allows for increased stability, regulation, and efficiency of the enzyme.
It comes from two greek words meaning breakdown body.
uh i am trying to find a synonym for lysosome too. the best i could come up with is:stomach/ digestive systemI'm sorry that that's all i came up with but i hope this helps!
When an enzyme and substrate come together, it is called the enzyme-substrate complex. This complex is a temporary intermediate state in which the enzyme binds to the substrate to catalyze a chemical reaction.
They come together at the active site
The liver and the pancreas
come inside = ¡Pase por favor!
no they can't can you digest metal? no so they can't ether. it will just come out the other end looking the same as it did when it was eaten
In eukaryotic cells, everything is compartmentalized - most reactions take place contained within an organelle. This is true for enzymes. The hydrolytic enzymes that could damage the membranes are not free-floating; they are contained in lysosomes. Even when they're active, they are not released or "come out" of the vesicle. Whatever needs hydrolyzing comes in instead. For example, food vacuoles will fuse with the lysosome, and the nutrients will come into contact with the enzymes within the contained space.
otherwise they would come out the same as they were when you ate them.
The same as anything else you digest
No, they can't digest them properly, it will just come out bloody
What's Come Inside of You was created on 2003-05-06.