The Organic Chemistry of Enzyme-Catalyzed Reactions is not a book on enzymes, but rather a book on the general mechanisms involved in chemical reactions involving enzymes. An enzyme is a protein molecule in a plant or animal that causes specific reactions without itself being permanently altered or destroyed.
This is a revised edition of a very successful book, which appeals to both academic and industrial markets.
- Illustrates the organic mechanism associated with each enzyme-catalyzed reaction
- Makes the connection between organic reaction mechanisms and enzyme mechanisms
- Compiles the latest information about molecular mechanisms of enzyme reactions
- Accompanied by clearly drawn structures, schemes, and figures
- Includes an extensive bibliography on enzyme mechanisms covering the last 30 years
- Explains how enzymes can accelerate the rates of chemical reactions with high specificity
- Provides approaches to the design of inhibitors of enzyme-catalyzed reactions
- Categorizes the cofactors that are appropriate for catalyzing different classes of reactions
- Shows how chemical enzyme models are used for mechanistic studies
- Describes catalytic antibody design and mechanism
- Includes problem sets and solutions for each chapter
- Written in an informal and didactic style
Product details
- File Size: 14170 KB
- Print Length: 736 pages
- Publisher: Academic Press; 2 edition (March 7, 2002)
- Publication Date: March 7, 2002
- Language: English
- ASIN: B008S8I8O6
- Text-to-Speech:
Enabled
- Word Wise: Not Enabled
- Lending: Not Enabled
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#38
in Reactions in Organic Chemistry -
#561
in Biochemistry Science -
#364
in Organic Chemistry (Kindle Store)