Biology, asked by athar3261, 1 year ago

What is the structural basis for enzyme specificity?

Answers

Answered by adwaithrknair
1

One of the properties of enzymes that makes them so important as diagnostic and research tools is the specificity they exhibit relative to the reactions they catalyze. A few enzymes exhibit absolute specificity; that is, they will catalyze only one particular reaction. Other enzymes will be specific for a particular type of chemical bond or functional group. In general, there are four distinct types of specificity:


Absolute specificity - the enzyme will catalyze only one reaction.

Group specificity - the enzyme will act only on molecules that have specific functional groups, such as amino, phosphate and methyl groups.

Linkage specificity - the enzyme will act on a particular type of chemical bond regardless of the rest of the molecular structure.

Stereochemical specificity - the enzyme will act on a particular steric or optical isomer.

Though enzymes exhibit great degrees of specificity, cofactors may serve many apoenzymes.

Similar questions