Antagonism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Antagonism is defined as hostility that results in active resistance, opposition, or contentiousness.
- In chemistry, antagonism is a phenomenon where two or more agents in combination have an overall effect which is less than the sum of their individual effects. The word is most commonly used in this fashion in biochemistry and toxicology. Interference in the physiological action of a chemical substance by another having a similar structure. For instance, a receptor antagonist is an agent that reduces the response that a ligand produces when it binds to a receptor on a cell. An example of this is the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist. The opposite of antagonism is synergy.
- In philosophy, antagonism refers to a principle, force or factor that is an active resistance, opposition, or contentiousness. For instance, capitalism and socialism can be considered to be inherent antagonists. Some refer agonism (Lyotard, 1975) as the opposite to.
- In Pharmacology, antagonism occurs when a substance has affinity for and combines with the same site an agonist would bind to without causing activation of the receptor.
- In Phytopathology, Antagonism refers to the action of any microbes that suppresses the activity of a plant pathogen.