Protein
Yes,it is an example of non protein enzyme.
DNA helicase. This is the enzyme that "unzips" DNA.
No. An enzyme is a molecule, specifically a protein, that catalyzes a chemical reaction.
enzyme catalysis is usually homogeneous because the substrate and enzyme are present in aqueous solution
Protein
Yes,it is an example of non protein enzyme.
DNA helicase. This is the enzyme that "unzips" DNA.
Yes, uncompetitive inhibition is an example of allosteric regulation in enzyme activity.
No. An enzyme is a molecule, specifically a protein, that catalyzes a chemical reaction.
One example of a real enzyme is amylase, which is found in saliva and helps break down starch into simpler sugars. This enzyme is crucial for the digestion of carbohydrates in the human body.
Since enzyme is a noun, it can be the subject or object in a sentence. Here is an example of the noun "enzyme" being used: Mary lacked the enzyme for digesting lactose which is the sugar in milk.
The suffix -ase means an enzyme while the root of the word means the substrate that the enzyme is involved in. For example: sucrase is involved in the breaking down of the sugar sucrose.
Enzymes are used to speed up chemical reactions. One example of an enzyme is lactase which speeds the the digestion of lactose.
Sucrase is the enzyme (called a disaccharidase) that digests sucrose, the major disaccharide in table sugar.
any kind of enzyme
enzyme catalysis is usually homogeneous because the substrate and enzyme are present in aqueous solution
if there is any inborn errors with enzyme B means, there will be a malfunctioning... so here the enzyme can not convert comp 1 to comp 2... so automatically enzyme C wont be having any function!!