Science, asked by hmajzoub, 1 year ago

What does it mean that enzymes are substrate specific?
A. They are only found in certain layers of Earth's surface.
B. They work on the subatomic level.
C. They only work on one compound or reactant.
D. All of the above
im not cheating but i need abit information about it

Answers

Answered by screwroaster
0

Answer:

Enzymes bind with chemical reactants called substrates. There may be one or more substrates for each type ofenzyme, depending on the particular chemical reaction. In some reactions, a single-reactant substrate is broken down into multiple products. ... Theenzyme's active site binds to thesubstrate.

Explanation:

if you dont wanna cheat then find our answer from above :)

Answered by tatihaikya
1

Answer:

may be answer is 3

Explanation:

Because enzymes has certain binding site on its surface which allow substrate that is of same shape of binding site to bind with it

In simple language consider enzyme to be lock and substrate to be key .key of same shape of locks binding site will open it its same mechanism

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