Urine Specimen must be chilled if testing will not be performed immediately.
<h3>What is Urine?</h3>
Urine is a liquid byproduct of human and many other animal metabolism. Urine travels from the kidneys to the urinary bladder via the ureters. Urine is discharged from the body through the urethra as a result of urination.
Many by-products of cellular metabolism, such as urea, uric acid, and creatinine, are nitrogen-rich and must be removed from the bloodstream. These by-products are excreted from the body through urination, which is the major way for excreting water-soluble compounds. A urinalysis can identify nitrogenous wastes in mammals.
To learn more about urine visit:
brainly.com/question/27454851
#SPJ4
 
        
             
        
        
        
The answer is A, denature. 
As each type of enzymes has its own optimum temperature, like the temperature that they work fastest at, so if the temperature goes too high above the optimum, the 3D structure of the enzyme breaks apart and deforms and they can no longer bind with substrates thus no longer works. In this scenario, we say the enzyme is denatured. 
Note that only if the temperature is too high can make the enzyme denature, if the temperature is too low, instead, the enzyme would be inactive, but once the temperature goes back to normal, they work again. Unlike denatured enzymes, which does not work even if the temperature goes back to normal.
        
             
        
        
        
The Nervous System and The Endocrine System.