substrate
(noun)
a surface on which an organism grows or to which it is attached
Examples of substrate in the following topics:
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Substrates for Biosynthesis
- Major metabolic pathways require substrates to be acted upon for the formation of larger, more complex products.
- The major metabolic pathways require substrates to be acted upon for the formation of larger, more complex products.
- These precursors are used as substrates for the biogenesis of large complex products.
- This process is characterized by the production of various intermediates and molecules that function as substrates in additional pathways .
- This pathway, comprised of a series of reactions, produces many intermediates and molecules utilized as substrates for biosynthesis in additional pathways.
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Fermentation Without Substrate-Level Phosphorylation
- Sugars are the most common substrate of fermentation, and typical examples of fermentation products are ethanol, lactic acid, lactose, and hydrogen.
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ABC Transporters
- ABC transporters are transmembrane proteins that utilize the energy of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis to carry out certain biological processes including translocation of various substrates across membranes and non-transport-related processes such as translation of RNA and DNA repair.
- They transport a wide variety of substrates across extra- and intracellular membranes, including metabolic products, lipids and sterols, and drugs.
- The substrates that can be transported include ions, amino acids, peptides, sugars, and other molecules that are mostly hydrophilic.
- The membrane-spanning region of the ABC transporter protects hydrophilic substrates from the lipids of the membrane bilayer thus providing a pathway across the cell membrane .
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Clostridial and Propionic Acid Fermentation
- Acetic acid is equally a co-metabolite of the organic substrates' fermentation (sugars, glycerol, lactic acid, etc.) by diverse groups of microorganisms which produce different acids: Propionic bacteria (propionate + acetate), Clostridium (butyrate + acetate), Enterobacteria (acetate + lactate), Hetero-fermentative bacteria (acetate, propionate, butyrate, valerate, etc.)
- Hydrolytic bacteria form a variety of reduced end-products from the fermentation of a given substrate.
- Acetic acid is equally a co-metabolite of the organic substrates' fermentation (sugars, glycerol, lactic acid, etc.) by diverse groups of microorganisms, which produce different acids:
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Fermented Foods
- Enrichment of the diet through development of a diversity of flavors, aromas, and textures in food substrates.
- Biological enrichment of food substrates with protein, essential amino acids, essential fatty acids, and vitamins.
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Polysaccharide Biosynthesis
- It is used in nucleotide sugars metabolism as an activated form of glucose as a substrate for enzymes called glucosyltransferases.
- Gluconeogenesis (abbreviated GNG) is a metabolic pathway that results in the generation of glucose from non-carbohydrate carbon substrates such as phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP).
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Cofactors and Energy Transitions
- Each class of group-transfer reaction is carried out by a particular cofactor, which is the substrate for a set of enzymes that produce it and a set of enzymes that consume it.
- Here, hundreds of separate types of enzymes remove electrons from their substrates and reduce NAD+ to NADH.
- This reduced cofactor is then a substrate for any of the reductases in the cell that require electrons to reduce their substrates.
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Enzymes Used in Industry
- In enzymatic reactions, the molecules at the beginning of the process, called substrates, are converted into different molecules, called products .
- Since enzymes are selective for their substrates and speed up only a few reactions from among many possibilities, the set of enzymes made in a cell determines which metabolic pathways occur in that cell.
- However, enzymes do differ from most other catalysts in that they are highly specific for their substrates.
- Activity is also affected by temperature, pressure, chemical environment (e.g., pH), and substrate concentration.
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Aerobic Hydrocarbon Oxidation
- When grown on hydrocarbon substrate as the carbon source, these microorganisms synthesize a wide range of chemicals with surface activity, such as glycolipid, phospholipid, and others.
- These chemicals are synthesized to emulsify the hydrocarbon substrate and facilitate its transport into the cells.
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Benzoate Catabolism
- Rhodococci typically metabolize aromatic substrates by first oxygenating the aromatic ring to form a diol (two alcohol groups).
- Then, the ring is cleaved with intra/extradiol mechanisms, opening the ring and exposing the substrate to further metabolism.