¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Exoenzymes
1. exoenzyme [n] - See also: exoenzyme
Lexicographical Neighbors of Exoenzymes
Literary usage of Exoenzymes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Veterinary Medicines by Finlay Dun (1911)
"The exoenzymes, like the exotoxins, are set free much more freely, and may be
thrown out into the fluids in considerable amounts whenever they are required: ..."
2. Intracellular Enzymes: A Course of Lectures Given in the Physiological by Horace Middleton Vernon (1908)
"exoenzymes, as we know, are liberated in large amounts whenever they are ...
and the exoenzymes are formed and are bound up in the tissues in a similar ..."
3. General Botany for Universities and Colleges by Hiram Delos Densmore (1920)
"In many other instances living cells form exoenzymes, which are first liberated
into the surrounding medium before they cause active fermentation. FIG. 133. ..."
4. Practical physiology by Arthur Philip Beddard, Marcus Seymour Pembrey (1910)
"... it with sand and water and then filtering through muslin, usually contain
large amounts of ferments. This extract will contain both exoenzymes and ..."
5. Organic Lies: Misconceptions of the United States Organic Act in America and by Mary Choate (2007)
"... vitamin precursors of plant and animal origin in a highly concentrated mass
of autotrophic, aerobic, and facultative enzymes, coenzymes and exoenzymes. ..."
6. Recordkeeping Guidelines for Occupational Injuries and Illnesses by DIANE Publishing Company (1997)
"... phthalic anhydride; formaldehyde; gum arabic; N;S04; flour; trimellitic
anhydride; red cedar and other wood dusts; bacillus-derived exoenzymes . ..."
7. Dairy Bacteriology by Sigurd Orla-Jensen, Paul Seidelin Arup (1921)
"... 14, 137, 140, 142 exoenzymes, 12, 140, 142 Eyes in cheese, abnormal, 139
normal, 41, 42, 138, 152 FAT butter, hydrolysis of, 121, 134 oxidation of, ..."