"The effect of substrate concentration on trypsin activity" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Effect of substrate on the Rate of Respiration on Yeast1 Justine Maturan Group 4 Sec. Y – 5L November 18‚ 2014 ________________________________________________________________ 1A scientific paper submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements in General Biology I Laboratory under Prof. Susan Sedano‚ 1st semester 2014-2015 ABSTRACT In order to determine the effect of the substrate on the rate of respiration of yeast‚ Durham test tube method was used in the first experiment

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    Trypsin Lab Report

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    enzyme‚ Trypsin‚ functions at the optimum salt concentration of 0.15M‚ then its ability to function efficiently will decrease. The rationale for this proposed relationship is that Trypsin won’t function in a different concentration than 0.15M because it performs best at that value. Anywhere else it may break down or work at a slower pace. MATERIALS & METHODS: To better understand the effect of salt concentration on trypsin the tubes were marked as 2mL with the different salt concentrations. The first

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    Title of Practical: The Effect of Concentration on Reaction Rate Aim: To use a simple reaction between sodium thiosulphate and hydrochloric acid to discover concentration this determines how fast chemical reactions occur. Independent Variable: Concentration of hydrochloric acid (%) Dependent Variable: Time taken for chemical reaction to take place (sec) Hypothesis: My prediction is that the increased concentration of the thiosulfate will in turn lead to an increase in the rate of reaction

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    Interpretation and Evaluation of Results Interpretation: The results from the experiment determining the effects of pH on enzyme activity show that as the independent variable‚ pH‚ increases the dependent variable‚ percentage transmission‚ decreases. This is shown in the results as at the lowest pH‚ pH 4.0 the average percentage transmission is at its highest at 97%. At the highest pH‚ pH 8.0 the average transmission is 78.5%. This is also supported from the graph as it produces a negative gradient

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    regulate other physiological processes‚ as well as being responsible for the activation of some ion channels and enzymes and assisting in trafficking of proteins to the cell membrane (5‚ 8). Why is PIP2 then so important in hippocampal cells? PIP2 is a substrate for hydrolysis by the enzyme phospholipase C (PLC)‚ whereby the products of this interaction are the secondary messengers‚ diacyl Glycerol (DAG) and inositol trisphosphate (IP3) (6‚ 8) that are involved in the regulation of physiological processes

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    OBJECTIVE: The experiment was carried out to investigate the effects of the increase in the enzyme concentration on the rate of reaction. By using self investigative and experimental skills‚ the experiment was done in order to determine how the rate of reaction will be altered‚ whether it will increase‚ decrease or remain constant when the different concentration of enzymes added. INTRODUCTION: Enzymes are produced naturally in plant‚ animal‚ and microbial cell. There are thousands of different

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    Bio 6 (Mon. Lab) 5/6/13 The Effects of Pepsin VS. Trypsin in The Digestion of Protein Introduction As food is mechanically and chemically digested through our oral cavity then passes through our pharynx and down our esophagus‚ our food then enters the stomach. The stomach‚ being the main organ for storage‚ also helps with breaking down our food‚ but in order to accomplish that our pancreas helps by excreting an inactive digestive enzyme called pepsinogen. Pepsinogen is the inactive form

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    known as the active site. The nature and arrangement of amino acids in the active site make it specific for only one type of substrate. Enzymes catalyze an unfathomable number of reactions by using a combination of only six basic mechanisms: (1) acid-base catalysis; (2) covalent catalysis; (3) metal ion catalysis; (4) electrostatic catalysis; (5) proximity and orientation effects; and (6) preferential binding of the transition state complex. Independent of the mechanistic characteristics taken to generate

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    Chou‚ P. (2007). The effects of background music on the reading performance of taiwanese esl students. New York: Self Published. Retrieved from http://books.google.com/books?id=zVz_Lv9OnN0C&pg=PA33&lpg=PA33&dq=effects of background music on concentration&source=bl&ots=xRZ4pvia4r&sig=lzJhKQmZfw7WXV-WD1hyJhT9I4A&hl=en&sa=X&ei=I3otUeKHBo_o8gSBooHYAw&ved=0CH8Q6AEwCQ * Hallman‚ Price‚ Katsarou‚ S. J. G. (2002‚ November 2).The effects of background music on

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    SBI4U Test A2 Table of Contents 1. What are the function roles and biological significance of the enzyme? Trypsin is part of the digestive system and degrades proteins‚ making it an enzyme known as protease. [1] It is one of the three principal digestive proteinases‚ the other two being pepsin and chymotrypsin. [9] Trypsin primarily hydrolyses peptides into smaller building-blocks‚ mainly amino acids (these peptides are the result of the enzyme pepsin ’s breaking

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