enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Substrate (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_(chemistry)

    The products are two polypeptides that have been formed by the cleavage of the larger peptide substrate. Another example is the chemical decomposition of hydrogen peroxide carried out by the enzyme catalase. As enzymes are catalysts, they are not changed by the reactions they carry out. The substrate(s), however, is/are converted to product(s).

  3. Substrate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate

    Substrate (building), natural stone, masonry surface, ceramic and porcelain tiles; Substrate (chemistry), the reactant which is consumed during a catalytic or enzymatic reaction; Substrate (materials science), the material on which a process is conducted; Substrate (printing), the base material that images will be printed onto

  4. Active site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_site

    During enzyme catalytic reaction, the substrate and active site are brought together in a close proximity. This approach has various purposes. Firstly, when substrates bind within the active site the effective concentration of it significantly increases than in solution. This means the number of substrate molecules involved in the reaction is ...

  5. Substrate (materials science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_(materials_science)

    A typical substrate might be rigid such as metal, concrete, or glass, onto which a coating might be deposited. Flexible substrates are also used. [1] Some substrates are anisotropic with surface properties being different depending on the direction: examples include wood and paper products.

  6. Leaving group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leaving_group

    In chemistry, a leaving group is defined by the IUPAC as an atom or group of atoms that detaches from the main or residual part of a substrate during a reaction or elementary step of a reaction. [1] However, in common usage, the term is often limited to a fragment that departs with a pair of electrons in heterolytic bond cleavage. [2]

  7. Substrate analog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_analog

    An example of a substrate analog that is also a suicide substrate/Trojan horse substrate is penicillin, which is an inhibitory substrate analog of peptidoglycan. [ 8 ] Some substrate analogs can still allow the enzyme to synthesize a product despite the enzyme’s inability to metabolize the substrate analog.

  8. Syn and anti addition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syn_and_anti_addition

    In organic chemistry, syn-and anti-addition are different ways in which substituent molecules can be added to an alkene (R 2 C=CR 2) or alkyne (RC≡CR).The concepts of syn and anti addition are used to characterize the different reactions of organic chemistry by reflecting the stereochemistry of the products in a reaction.

  9. Photocatalysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photocatalysis

    In chemistry, photocatalysis is the acceleration of a photoreaction in the presence of a photocatalyst, the excited state of which "repeatedly interacts with the reaction partners forming reaction intermediates and regenerates itself after each cycle of such interactions."