Inhibitor may refer to a molecule or a protein or any substance that inhibits a process or a particular other molecules (mostly proteins). Tetracycline can inhibit the protein synthesis
in bacteria. Thus we are taking antibiotics as an inhibitor to get cured of bacterial infection.
No, lactose is not a noncompetitive inhibitor. Lactose is a sugar found in milk that can act as an inducer for the lactose operon in bacteria, but it does not act as an inhibitor in enzyme kinetics.
A proton-pump inhibitor's main purpose is a reduction in the production of gastric acid. The inhibitor is used in a variety of treatments for conditions such as Dyspepsia, Eosinophilic esophagitis, and Barrett's esophagus.
A catalyst is a material that speeds up a chemical reaction by providing an alternative pathway with lower activation energy. Alternatively, an inhibitor is a material that slows down a chemical reaction by blocking the active sites on the reactant molecules, preventing them from coming together or reacting.
The opposite of a catalyst is an inhibitor, something that suppresses or slows a reaction.
GTP
If by maoi you mean a mono-amine oxidase inhibitor, then no, it is not.
ACE inhibitor
Glutathione S-transferase Pi, a JNK inhibitor used in the treatment of cancer.
No, Depakote is not an MAO Inhibitor.
rust inhibitor is some sort of alkali
Selegiline is an MAO-B inhibitor
Could be Opiate Treatment Index or Orotracheal Intubation or Ovomucoid Trypsin Inhibitor
DDT is a F0/FA atpase inhibitor
inhibitor
Grapefruit juice is an inhibitor of enzymes.
The S stands for serotonin and the N stands for norepinephrine and RI stands for reuptake inhibitor. So, obviously these drugs are supposed to work on both serotonin and norepinephrine. However, some literature uses SNRI to mean Selective Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor, and this will work better on norepinephrine. Then you have the SSRI which is Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor, which works better on serotonin.
No, it is not a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI).