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substrate |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.01 sec. |
substrateThe base layer of a structure such as a chip, multichip module (MCM), printed circuit board or disk platter. Silicon is the most widely used substrate for chips. Fiberglass (FR4) is mostly used for printed circuit boards, and ceramic is used for MCMs. Disk substrates are typically aluminum, glass or plastic. substrate 1. Biochem the substance upon which an enzyme acts 2. Electronics the semiconductor base on which other material is deposited, esp in the construction of integrated circuits substrate [′səb‚strāt] (biochemistry) The substance with which an enzyme reacts. (ecology) The foundation to which a sessile organism is attached. (electronics) The physical material on which a microcircuit is fabricated; used primarily for mechanical support and insulating purposes, as with ceramic, plastic, and glass substrates; however, semiconductor and ferrite substrates may also provide useful electrical functions. (engineering) Basic surface on which a material adheres, for example, paint or laminate. (organic chemistry) A compound with which a reagent reacts.
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277], which belongs to a helix in the substrate binding site. Gilliland, Structure of the Xenobiotic Substrate Binding Site of a Glutathione S-Transferase as Revealed by X-ray Crystallographic Analysis of Product Complexes with the Diastereomers of 9-(S-Glutathionyl)-10-Hydroxy-9,10-Dithydrophenanthrene, Biochemistry 33 (5), 1043-1052 (1994). By using substrate-linked probes, such as EDTA and photo-crosslinking reagents, we hope to define the KNA sequence that constitutes the substrate binding site as well as the metal ion binding site. |
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