The region of an enzyme that catalyzes reactions is known as the active site. This specific area is typically a pocket or groove on the enzyme's surface where substrates bind. The active site has a unique shape and chemical environment that facilitates the conversion of substrates into products, often by lowering the activation energy required for the reaction.
Yes, that is correct.
An enzyme is a specific kind of protein that catalyzes reactions by lowering the activation energy needed for the reaction to occur.
The name is enzyme.
The enzyme responsible for converting tyrosine into melanin is tyrosinase. Tyrosinase catalyzes the reactions that lead to the production of melanin, the pigment responsible for skin, hair, and eye color.
No. An enzyme is a molecule, specifically a protein, that catalyzes a chemical reaction.
an enzyme is protien that catalyzes chemical reactions for organisms
Yes, that is correct.
An enzyme is a specific kind of protein that catalyzes reactions by lowering the activation energy needed for the reaction to occur.
Yes, every enzyme possesses an active site where it catalyzes chemical reactions.
This varies per enzyme and what it catalyzes but chemical reactions that result in an increase in temperature often speed up enzyme catalysis.
The name is enzyme.
The enzyme that catalyzes transcription is called RNA polymerase.
enzyme is a kind of protein that catalyzes specific reactions & abzymes are antibodies that target the transition state of an expected reaction.
The enzyme that catalyzes transcription in cells is called RNA polymerase.
An oxidoreductase enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of phenols and other related substances.
Enzymes are highly specific. Each enzyme catalyzes a particular chemical reaction or at most a family of closely related chemical reactions.
In biology it is an enzyme.