This property represents the direction of this catalysis under all physiological conditions if there is one. Note that chemically a catalyst will increase the rate of the reaction in both directions. In biology, however, there are cases where the enzyme is expressed only when the controlled bidirectional conversion is on one side of the chemical equilibrium [todo : example]. If that is the case and the controller, under biological conditions, is always catalyzing the conversion in one direction then this fact can be captured using this property. If the enzyme is active for both directions, or the conversion is not bidirectional, this property should be left empty.
Source:http://www.biopax.org/release/biopax-level3.owl#catalysisDirection
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This property represents the direction of this catalysis under all
physiological conditions if there is one.
Note that chemically a catalyst will increase the rate of the reaction
in both directions. In biology, however, there are cases where the
enzyme is expressed only when the controlled bidirectional conversion is
on one side of the chemical equilibrium [todo : example]. If that is the
case and the controller, under biological conditions, is always
catalyzing the conversion in one direction then this fact can be
captured using this property. If the enzyme is active for both
directions, or the conversion is not bidirectional, this property should
be left empty.,
This property represents the direction of this catalysis under all
physiological conditions if there is one.
Note that chemically a catalyst will increase the rate of the reaction
in both directions. In biology, however, there are cases where the
enzyme is expressed only when the controlled bidirectional conversion is
on one side of the chemical equilibrium [todo : example]. If that is the
case and the controller, under biological conditions, is always
catalyzing the conversion in one direction then this fact can be
captured using this property. If the enzyme is active for both
directions, or the conversion is not bidirectional, this property should
be left empty.,
This property represents the direction of this catalysis under all
physiological conditions if there is one.
Note that chemically a catalyst will increase the rate of the reaction
in both directions. In biology, however, there are cases where the
enzyme is expressed only when the controlled bidirectional conversion is
on one side of the chemical equilibrium [todo : example]. If that is the
case and the controller, under biological conditions, is always
catalyzing the conversion in one direction then this fact can be
captured using this property. If the enzyme is active for both
directions, or the conversion is not bidirectional, this property should
be left empty.
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