antidootein
Antidootein is a proposed or fictional class of proteins that would act as antidotes to toxins. The term is not widely used in formal biochemistry and has no consensus definition in mainstream science. In theoretical discussions, antidooteins are envisioned as proteins capable of neutralizing toxins through high-affinity binding, sequestration, enzymatic modification, or structural alteration that prevents toxin action. They could be natural variants that bind endogenous or exogenous toxins, or engineered therapeutics designed to counteract venom, organophosphates, or other harmful molecules.
Possible mechanisms include: toxin sequestration by forming stable toxin–protein complexes that prevent interaction with cellular targets;
Relationship to existing concepts: antitoxins, detoxification enzymes, and neutralizing antibodies are real-world analogs that share aspects
Research status and outlook: at present, there is no officially recognized class of proteins named antidootein.
See also: antidote, antitoxin, toxin-binding proteins, neutralizing antibodies, detoxification enzymes.