| 1. | Enzymes work efficiently at high temperatures and high pressures. |
| 2. | Inorganic catalysts work efficiently at high temperatures and high pressures, while enzymes get damaged at high temperatures. |
| 3. | Both enzymes and inorganic catalysts work efficiently at high temperatures. |
| 4. | Enzymes work efficiently only at low temperatures. |
| 1. | The sequence of amino acids that forms the enzyme's backbone. |
| 2. | The crevice or pocket where the substrate binds. |
| 3. | A part of the enzyme that gets destroyed at low temperatures. |
| 4. | A non-functional region involved in structural stability. |
| 1. | Random collision between enzyme and substrate |
| 2. | Permanent covalent bonding between enzyme and substrate |
| 3. | Identical chemical composition of all substrates |
| 4. | Complementary shape between enzyme active site and substrate |
| 1. | they act only at pH 14 |
| 2. | they convert all molecules equally |
| 3. | active site recognises substrate precisely |
| 4. | they alter equilibrium of the reaction |
| 1. | Enzymes increase the activation energy required for the reaction. |
| 2. | Enzymes increase the rate of reaction without being consumed. |
| 3. | Enzymes work only in the presence of inorganic catalysts. |
| 4. | Enzymes make a reaction endothermic instead of exothermic. |
The statement "All biological catalysts are proteins" is no longer valid after the discovery of:
1. ribonuclease
2. ribozyme
3. RNAs
4. DNAs
| 1. | does not take place |
| 2. | takes place at a very slow rate |
| 3. | takes place at a higher rate |
| 4. | is not affected at all |