Research Topic · Peer-Reviewed

Enzyme Assays

Enzyme assays are laboratory measurements that quantify the catalytic activity of an enzyme by determining how rapidly it converts substrate to product under defined conditions. Because Enzymes are protein catalysts that accelerate biochemical reactions, their activity is most usefully expressed as a rate, and assay…

Curated from this journal's research 📚 9 peer-reviewed articles cited Cited 41× across the literature 🔖 ISSN 2690-4829 🗓 Reviewed July 2026

Overview

Enzyme assays are laboratory measurements that quantify the catalytic activity of an enzyme by determining how rapidly it converts substrate to product under defined conditions. Because Enzymes are protein catalysts that accelerate biochemical reactions, their activity is most usefully expressed as a rate, and assays are designed to capture this rate reliably and reproducibly. Methods are grouped by how the reaction is followed: continuous assays track product formation or substrate consumption in real time, often through spectrophotometric, fluorometric, or coupled-reaction readouts, while discontinuous or endpoint assays sample the reaction after a fixed interval, increasingly using chromatographic and mass-spectrometric detection. Assays may also be classified by the chemistry being monitored, such as hydrolysis of polysaccharides by glycoside hydrolases like cellulases and xylanases, or oxidation and halogenation by oxidoreductases such as peroxidases. Accurate measurement depends on controlling temperature, pH, ionic conditions, and substrate concentration, and on operating within the linear range of the reaction. Kinetic parameters derived from these data characterize an enzyme's efficiency and its response to inhibitors, activators, and immobilization on supports. Enzyme assays underpin applications across basic research, biocatalysis and industrial biotechnology, quality control, and clinical diagnostics, where enzyme activity serves as a marker of biological state. As the principal means of quantifying catalysis, they are foundational to enzymology.

Research published in this journal

9 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.

How this research is being cited

The 9 articles above have been cited 41 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.

A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Enzyme Assays, linking to each citing work.

Editorial oversight

Curated from peer-reviewed research published in Enzymes (ISSN 2690-4829).

Journal editorial board
Loredana Marcolongo · Italy Melike Caglayan · United States Daniela Vullo · Italy

This page summarises published research for orientation; it is not medical or professional advice.