When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Competitive inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competitive_inhibition

    Diagram showing competitive inhibition. In competitive inhibition, an inhibitor that resembles the normal substrate binds to the enzyme, usually at the active site, and prevents the substrate from binding. [8] At any given moment, the enzyme may be bound to the inhibitor, the substrate, or neither, but it cannot bind both at the same time.

  3. Lineweaver–Burk plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lineweaver–Burk_plot

    Effects of different types of inhibition on the double-reciprocal plot. When used for determining the type of enzyme inhibition, the Lineweaver–Burk plot can distinguish between competitive, pure non-competitive and uncompetitive inhibitors. The various modes of inhibition can be compared to the uninhibited reaction.

  4. Enzyme induction and inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Enzyme_induction_and_inhibition

    Enzyme inhibition can refer to the inhibition of the expression of the enzyme by another molecule; interference at the enzyme-level, basically with how the enzyme works. This can be competitive inhibition, uncompetitive inhibition, non-competitive inhibition or partially competitive inhibition.

  5. File:Competitive inhibition int.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Competitive...

    Image:Competitive inhibition.svg, which is a vector version of Image:Competitive inhibition.png: Author: Authored by Jerry Crimson Mann, modified by TimVickers, vectorized by Fvasconcellos and made into international version by myself (User:PatríciaR: Permission (Reusing this file)

  6. Enzyme inhibitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_inhibitor

    Competitive inhibitors can bind to E, but not to ES. Competitive inhibition increases K m (i.e., the inhibitor interferes with substrate binding), but does not affect V max (the inhibitor does not hamper catalysis in ES because it cannot bind to ES). [24]: 102 Uncompetitive inhibitors bind to ES. Uncompetitive inhibition decreases both K m and ...

  7. Enzyme kinetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_kinetics

    On a Lineweaver-Burk plot, the presence of a noncompetitive inhibitor is illustrated by a change in the y-intercept, defined as 1/V max. The x-intercept, defined as −1/K M, will remain the same. In competitive inhibition, the inhibitor will bind to an enzyme at the active site, competing with the substrate.

  8. Active site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_site

    Organisation of enzyme structure and lysozyme example. Binding sites in blue, catalytic site in red and peptidoglycan substrate in black. (In biology and biochemistry, the active site is the region of an enzyme where substrate molecules bind and undergo a chemical reaction.

  9. Substrate analog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_analog

    Substrate analogs can act as competitive inhibitors of an enzymatic reaction. An example is phosphoramidate to the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. [ 1 ] Other examples of substrate analogs include 5’-adenylyl-imidodiphosphate, a substrate analog of ATP , and 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide, a substrate analog of NADH .