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Substrate (1713 bytes)
3: The word '''substrate''' can mean the following: 4: ...ule]] which is acted upon by an [[enzyme]]. See [[substrate (biochemistry)]] 5: ...ndustrial [[printing]], '''[[substrate (printing)|substrate]]''' is used to describe the base material that i... 6: ...]]. Depending on the material and application the substrates can be between 5 and 30 cm in diameter. They ar... 7: ...ple, in many households, a bruised [[apple]] is a substrate for the growth of a [[fungus]]. Substrate (biochemistry) (270 bytes) 1: ...catalyze]]s a [[chemical reaction]] involving the substrate. Substrate (printing) (1434 bytes) 1: '''Substrate''' is a term used in [[printing]], mainly industr... 3: ...as a low cost and low quality is chosen to be the substrate - [[newsprint]]. In contrast, a monthly [[magazi... 7: ...me of the terms used to describe the qualities of substrates: 10: ...ldout''' - Retention of ink on the surface of the substrate. 11: '''Gloss''' - Reflectivity of the substrate. Polymer substrate (417 bytes) 1: '''Polymer substrate''' is another name for the plastic substance used... Dehydrogenase (236 bytes) 1: ...]] that [[oxidize]]s a [[substrate (biochemistry)|substrate]] by transferring [[hydrogen]] to an acceptor, us... Enzyme activity (489 bytes) 5: ...tandard conditions of temperature, pH and optimal substrate concentration. Competitive inhibitor (1624 bytes) 7: ...haracteristically increasing the concentration of substrate reduces the effect of the inhibitor, and vice-ver... 9: ...the inhibitor and increasing the concentration of substrate does not restore enzyme activity. Active site (1305 bytes) 1: ...ion and binding of the [[substrate (biochemistry)|substrate]]. 3: ...xcept that the inhibitor can only bind the enzyme-substrate complex rather than the free enzyme. 6: ...e substrate molecule. Often enzymes bond to their substrate by [[Van der Waals force]]s or [[hydrogen bond]]s... Cofactor (biochemistry) (685 bytes) 5: ...organic substance that directly participates as a substrate in the reaction, it is called a [[coenzyme]]. Flexible electronics (984 bytes) 1: ... be flexible as the films deposited on top of the substrate is usually very thin, on the order of a few micro... Threshold Voltage (1135 bytes) 3: ...ubstrate become concentrated at the region of the substrate nearest the gate causing the concentration of ele... 7: ...e to there being more electrons that holes in the substrate near the gate creating a channel where current ca... Homoepitaxy (348 bytes) 2: homoepitaxy, a crystalline film grows on a substrate or film of the 4: film than the substrate and to fabricating layers with different Pouch laminators (811 bytes) 1: ...ate. The pouch containing the print, laminate and substrate is passed through a set of heated rollers under p... Eadie-Hofstee diagram (1328 bytes) 1: ...]] or the velocity vs. [[substrate (biochemistry)|substrate]] [[concentration]] ratio: 5: ...[Michaelis-Menten constant]], [<em>S</em>] is the substrate concentration, and <em>v<sub>max</sub></em> is th... 7: ...gives equal weight to data points in any range of substrate concentration or reaction velocity. (The Lineweav... Bulk micromachining (1312 bytes) 3: ...k micromachining produces structures ''inside'' a substrate. 5: ...icon]] [[Wafer (electronics)|wafer]]s are used as substrates for bulk micromachining, for its [[anisotropic]]... 7: ...cromachining starts with a silicon wafer or other substrate and selectively etches into it, using [[photolith... Michaelis-Menten kinetics (4658 bytes) 3: ...his state, enzyme active sites are saturated with substrate. Note that at the ''maximum velocity'', the facto... 8: ...acteristic value for the enzyme is defined by the substrate concentration at its half-maximum speed (''V''<su... 11: ...r very tightly and rarely dissociates without the substrate first reacting to form product. 52: ...not practical to measure the amount of the enzyme substrate complex during the reaction, so the reaction must... 58: ...nstant E<sub><small>0</small></sub> and different substrate concentration [S]. Kinase (805 bytes) 1: ...le, [[Adenosine triphosphate|ATP]] to a specified substrate or target; the process is termed "[[phosphorylati... 3: ...erent types of kinases; each named for the target substrate. Allostery (3758 bytes) 5: ...T) or relaxed (R), and that relaxed subunits bind substrate more readily than those in the tense state. The t... 8: ... further holds that in the absence of any ligand (substrate or otherwise), the equilibrium favors the T state... 13: ...the R state, thereby enhancing their affinity for substrate. 17: ...so that their binding sites are more receptive to substrate. To summarize: 20: * molecules of substrate bind via induced fit protocol Chymotrypsin (2569 bytes) 7: ... bonds in vitro, a virtue that enabled the use of substrate analogs such as N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine p-nitrop... 9: ...lently bonded to the substrate, forming an enzyme-substrate intermediate. 11: ...ed substrate, exploiting the fact that the enzyme-substrate intermediate p-nitrophenolate has a yellow colour... 13: ... takes place in two steps. First acylation of the substrate to form an acyl-enzyme intermediate and then deac... Lipases (89 bytes) 1: A '''lipase''' is an [[enzyme]] whose principal substrate is a [[lipid]].
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