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enzyme inhibition

   Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
enzyme inhibition [′en‚zīm ‚in·ə·′bish·ən]
(biochemistry)
Prevention of an enzymic process as a result of the interaction of some substance with the enzyme so as to decrease the rate of reaction.

Enzyme inhibition

The prevention of an enzymic process as a result of the interaction of some substance with an enzyme so as to decrease the rate of the enzymic reaction. The substance causing such an effect is termed an inhibitor. Enzyme inhibitors are important as chemotherapeutic agents, as regulators in normal control of enzymic processes in living organisms, and as useful agents in the study of biochemistry. See Antibiotic, Chemotherapy, Enzyme

Inhibitors have been classified as competitive, noncompetitive, and uncompetitive. The effect of a competitive inhibitor is to bind only free enzyme. This can be reversed by sufficiently increased substrate concentrations, so that essentially all of the enzyme is bound into an enzyme-substrate complex. Since both noncompetitive and uncompetitive inhibitors interact with the enzyme-substrate complex, their effects are not nullified by increased concentrations of substrate. An uncompetitive inhibitor exerts less effect (as percent of control) at low than at high substrate concentrations, since less of the enzyme is in the form of the enzyme-substrate complex, with which it interacts. A noncompetitive inhibitor, which reacts with both free enzyme and the enzyme-substrate complex, exerts comparable effects at all substrate concentrations.



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Red yeast rice accomplishes the same enzyme inhibition but is considered a natural alternative that safely promotes healthy serum cholesterol levels.
In the absence of a validated cell culture assay, the 50% inhibitory concentration measured in the NA enzyme inhibition assay is used as the benchmark for measuring drug sensitivity.
 
 
 
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