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  2. Enzyme inhibitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_inhibitor

    Reversible inhibitors produce different types of inhibition depending on whether they bind to the enzyme, the enzyme-substrate complex, or both. Enzyme inhibitors play an important role in all cells, since they are generally specific to one enzyme each and serve to control that enzyme's activity.

  3. Antibiotic synergy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antibiotic_synergy

    Some research is devoted to finding combinations of extant antibiotics which when combined exhibit synergy. A classic example of this effect is the interaction between β-lactams, which damage the bacteria cell membrane, and aminoglycosides, which inhibit protein synthesis. [1]

  4. Competitive inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competitive_inhibition

    Most competitive inhibitors function by binding reversibly to the active site of the enzyme. [1] As a result, many sources state that this is the defining feature of competitive inhibitors. [ 7 ] This, however, is a misleading oversimplification , as there are many possible mechanisms by which an enzyme may bind either the inhibitor or the ...

  5. Enzyme induction and inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_induction_and...

    Index inducer or just inducer predictably induce metabolism via a given pathway and are commonly used in prospective clinical drug-drug interaction studies. [2]Strong, moderate, and weak inducers are drugs that decreases the AUC of sensitive index substrates of a given metabolic pathway by ≥80%, ≥50% to <80%, and ≥20% to <50%, respectively.

  6. Non-competitive inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-competitive_inhibition

    During his research in the hospital, he was the first to view the different types of inhibition; specifically using fructose and glucose as inhibitors of maltase activity. Maltase breaks maltose into two units of glucose. Findings from that experiment allowed for the divergence of non-competitive and competitive inhibition.

  7. Uncompetitive inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncompetitive_inhibition

    Uncompetitive inhibition is present within biological systems in a number of ways. In fact, it often becomes clear that the traits of inhibition specific to uncompetitive inhibitors, such as their tendency to act at their best at high concentrations of substrate, are essential to some important bodily functions operating properly. [7]

  8. External inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_inhibition

    External inhibition is the observed decrease of the response of a conditioned reaction when an external (distracting) stimulus that was not part of the original conditioned response set is introduced.

  9. Contact inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_inhibition

    Untransformed human cells exhibit normal cellular behavior and mediate their growth and proliferation via interplay between environmental nutrients, growth factor signaling, and cell density. As cell density increases and the culture becomes confluent, they initiate cell cycle arrest and downregulate proliferation and mitogen signaling pathways ...