The enzyme breaks the DNA up wherever it finds a specific sequence.
The enzymes break starch molecules down into sugar molecules that can be fermented, a process called saccharization.
An enzyme in your small intestine can break the pair apart and then they can be immediately absorbed.
Once inside, the brain's enzymes break the link so the drug can remain and go to work.
Once the protective coating is gone the enzymes will instantly react with the poison compound and break it down, in effect destroying it.
These enzymes specifically break the DNA at certain short sequences.
During digestion, enzymes then break these nutrients down so that they can be absorbed through the walls of the digestive tract and enter the bloodstream.
Other enzymes break long proteins into short ones and accomplish other important tasks.
The digestive enzymes will break the thick shell of the egg and allow formation of the zygotes called "oncospheres".
Humans and many other animals lack an enzyme to break the beta-linkages, so they do not digest cellulose.