Enzyme specificity

Correct Answer: Amount of enzyme causing transformation of 1 H.mol of substrate per minute under standard conditions
Description: Some enzymes are absolutely specific. For example, hydrolysis of urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide is catalyzed by urease. Urea is the only substrate for urease. Thiourea, though structurally similar to urea, will not act as the substrate for urease. Similarly, glucose oxidase will oxidize only beta-D-glucose and no other isomeric form. Thus, these enzymes show absolute specificity. Enzyme activity is expressed as micromoles of substrate conveed to product per minute under specified assay conditions. One standard unit (or International Unit) of enzyme activity (U) is the amount of enzyme that will conve one micromole of substrate per minute per litre of sample and is abbreted as U/L.Ref: DM Vasudevan, page no: 57
Category: Biochemistry
Share:

Get More
Subject Mock Tests

Practice with over 200,000 questions from various medical subjects and improve your knowledge.

Attempt a mock test now
Mock Exam

Take an exam with 100 random questions selected from all subjects to test your knowledge.

Coming Soon
Get More
Subject Mock Tests

Try practicing mock tests with over 200,000 questions from various medical subjects.

Attempt a mock test now
Mock Exam

Attempt an exam of 100 questions randomly chosen from all subjects.

Coming Soon
WordPress › Error

There has been a critical error on this website.

Learn more about troubleshooting WordPress.