Morning Overview on MSN: Study shows bacterial enzyme threads collagen through a ring to break it down
Study shows bacterial enzyme threads collagen through a ring to break it down
MSN: Scientists discover new enzyme families that break down rare bacterial carbohydrates
Ars Technica: Neural network finds an enzyme that can break down polyurethane
Scientists have identified over 600,000 microbial proteins that can break down plastics, revealing a nearly universal ability in microbes.
Enzyme, a catalyst that regulates the rate at which chemical reactions proceed in living organisms without itself being altered in the process. Most critically, enzymes catalyze all aspects of cell metabolism.
Enzymes are specialized proteins (and in some cases RNA molecules) that act as catalysts in living organisms. They speed up the chemical reactions required for life by lowering the activation energy, all without being consumed in the process.
Enzymes catalyze, or speed up, chemical reactions in cells. More specifically, they lower the threshold necessary to start the intended reaction. They do this by binding to another substance...
Enzymes are substances in the body that cause and speed up crucial chemical reactions. Enzymes’ function is to help trigger bodily processes ranging from digestion to blood clotting to growth. There are many types of enzymes, and most enzymes are proteins.
The enzyme is not destroyed during the reaction and is used over and over. A cell contains thousands of different types of enzyme molecules, each specific to a particular chemical reaction.
An enzyme is a protein biomolecule that acts as a biocatalyst by regulating the rate of various metabolic reactions without itself being altered in the process.