Introducing the mechanism by which enzymes lose their activity and strategies to prevent inactivation!
This article introduces the inactivation of enzymes. Proteins are made up of numerous amino acids that link together, folding into structures that perform various functions. Enzymes are also a type of protein that catalyzes the chemical reactions necessary for sustaining life. To function as enzymes, several hundred amino acid polymers must be correctly folded, and the enzymes need the folded amino acid polymers to join at the correct positions and orientations to form complexes. *For more detailed information, please refer to the related links and catalog. Feel free to contact us for further inquiries.*
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In addition to our environmental analysis business, we conduct a wide range of contract analysis as a partner for researchers and engineers who "support science." We have started to offer services for measuring antioxidant capacity in functional foods (using SOD-like activity measurement kits and the DPPH method), analyzing enzyme activity and enzyme inhibition activity, and various fatty acid analyses. Recently, we have begun contract analysis for measuring biofilm formation and inhibition, as well as assessing the effects of biofilm agents, continuously challenging ourselves in new areas.