AI Article Synopsis

  • A study analyzed Hill coefficients from dietary polyphenol enzyme inhibitions to differentiate between allosteric denaturing processes and single site enzyme inhibition.
  • Most reported interactions indicated that polyphenols generally cause enzyme inhibition through allosteric effects rather than direct single site inhibition, based on the Hill coefficients collected.
  • The findings led to the proposal of a new hypothesis for polyphenol biological activity called the insect swarm hypothesis.

Article Abstract

Inspired by a recent article by Prinz, suggesting that Hill coefficients, obtained from four parameter logistic fits to dose-response curves, represent a parameter allowing distinction between a general allosteric denaturing process and real single site enzyme inhibition, Hill coefficients of a number of selected dietary polyphenol enzyme inhibitions were compiled from the available literature. From available literature data, it is apparent that the majority of polyphenol enzyme interactions reported lead to enzyme inhibition via allosteric denaturing rather than single site inhibition as judged by their reported Hill coefficients. The results of these searches are presented and their implications discussed leading to the suggestion of a novel hypothesis for polyphenol biological activity termed the insect swarm hypothesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3124628PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12154-011-0055-9DOI Listing

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