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Vmax

Vmax is a term used to denote the maximum rate of a process in various scientific and engineering contexts. In biochemistry and enzymology, Vmax refers to the maximal rate of an enzymatic reaction when the substrate concentration is sufficiently high that all active sites are occupied. Under Michaelis-Menten kinetics, the reaction velocity V approaches Vmax as substrate concentration [S] becomes much greater than the Michaelis constant Km. The relationship is commonly written as V = (Vmax [S])/(Km + [S]). Vmax is determined by the total concentration of active enzyme and by the turnover number kcat, with Vmax = kcat [E]tot. Inhibitors can modulate Vmax: competitive inhibitors increase apparent Km without changing Vmax, while noncompetitive inhibitors decrease Vmax.

In pharmacology and pharmacokinetics, Vmax denotes the maximal rate of drug metabolism or elimination in a

In engineering and consumer products, Vmax is used to denote the top speed of a device or

given
system.
When
metabolic
pathways
become
saturated,
increases
in
drug
concentration
do
not
yield
proportional
increases
in
clearance,
and
the
system
can
display
zero-order
kinetics
with
a
nearly
constant
rate
equal
to
Vmax.
vehicle.
The
term
appears
in
specifications
for
engines
and
in
model
names,
such
as
high-performance
motorcycles
or
other
machinery
where
maximum
velocity
is
a
salient
feature.
Related
concepts
include
Km,
kcat,
and
the
distinction
between
competitive
and
noncompetitive
inhibition
in
enzyme
kinetics.