20. Proteolytic enzymes are usually biosynthesized as large, inactive precursors known as (A) holoenzymes (B) ribozyme (C) zymogens (D) apoenzymes

20. Proteolytic enzymes are usually biosynthesized as large, inactive precursors known as
(A) holoenzymes
(B) ribozyme
(C) zymogens
(D) apoenzymes

Proteolytic enzymes are biosynthesized as large, inactive precursors called zymogens to prevent self-digestion of producing cells. The correct answer is (C) zymogens.

Correct Answer

Zymogens serve as inactive precursors for proteolytic enzymes, such as trypsinogen or pepsinogen, which are activated by cleavage only at specific sites like the digestive tract. This mechanism protects cells from damage by potent proteases during synthesis and storage. Examples include pancreatic enzymes stored in zymogen granules until hormonal signals trigger release and activation.

Option Breakdown

Option Definition & Role Why Incorrect for Proteolytic Precursors
(A) Holoenzymes Complete, active enzyme complexes with cofactor bound to apoenzyme . Represents active form, not inactive precursor .
(B) Ribozyme RNA molecule with catalytic activity, like self-splicing introns . Non-protein enzyme; unrelated to protein precursors .
(C) Zymogens Inactive proenzymes activated by proteolysis; standard for proteases . Correct – Matches query exactly .
(D) Apoenzymes Protein portion of enzyme lacking cofactor; inactive until binding . Lacks cofactor, not larger precursor form .
1 Comment
  • Sonal Nagar
    January 15, 2026

    zymogens

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