释义 |
catalysisca‧tal‧y‧sis /kəˈtælɪsɪs/ noun [uncountable] technical catalysisOrigin: 1600-1700 Greek katalysis, from katalyein ‘to become liquid’, from kata- ( ➔ CATACLYSM) + lyein ‘to let go, become liquid’ - Enzymatic catalysis involves the breaking and making of different chemical bonds.
- However, nobody had made the conclusive step of considering the consequences of this, namely the chain of muon catalysis reactions.
- Linkage of the addition reaction to the molecular mechanism of catalysis therefore depends on demonstration of sequence specificity.
- Thus, residue Cys 177 is identified as essential for catalysis.
- X-ray diffraction and spectroscopic techniques continue to provide important clues, leading towards an understanding of the remarkable specificity of enzymatic catalysis.
the process of making a chemical reaction quicker by adding a catalyst |