Those are called substates.
D. substrate (a specific reactant acted upon by an enzyme is called the enzyme's substrate.)
the substance that an enzyme acts upon is subtrate
In enzyme-catalyzed reactions, the term "substrate" is synonymous with the molecule or molecules that the enzyme acts upon to produce a reaction. It is the specific substance upon which an enzyme acts to produce a product.
In a typical enzyme reaction, the substrate is the molecule upon which the enzyme acts. It binds to the enzyme's active site, forming an enzyme-substrate complex. This interaction facilitates the conversion of the substrate into products, which are then released, allowing the enzyme to catalyze further reactions.
The reactant for the enzyme aspartase is aspartic acid. It catalyzes the conversion of aspartic acid into fumaric acid.
substrate
D. substrate (a specific reactant acted upon by an enzyme is called the enzyme's substrate.)
A subtrate is a reactant an enzyme acts off of. This fits into the active site and turns into the products
If the reactant is affected by an enzyme, it then referred to as a SUBSTRATE.
the substance that an enzyme acts upon is subtrate
In enzyme-catalyzed reactions, the term "substrate" is synonymous with the molecule or molecules that the enzyme acts upon to produce a reaction. It is the specific substance upon which an enzyme acts to produce a product.
substrates
the region where a reactant binds to an enzyme is known as the active site
In a typical enzyme reaction, the substrate is the molecule upon which the enzyme acts. It binds to the enzyme's active site, forming an enzyme-substrate complex. This interaction facilitates the conversion of the substrate into products, which are then released, allowing the enzyme to catalyze further reactions.
The reactant for the enzyme aspartase is aspartic acid. It catalyzes the conversion of aspartic acid into fumaric acid.
Generally in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction, the reactant is called the substrate, which in association with the enzyme forms the product.
The substrate