Talk:ecoenzyme

RFV discussion: October–December 2020
Rfv-sense: A solution made from kitchen waste that may be used as a cleaner. I'm not sure what these quotes mean but they surely have nothing to do with kitchen waste:



DTLHS (talk) 05:15, 7 October 2020 (UTC)


 * In the first quotation, the sense is one coined by Lüttge et al. (1995), Stress responses of tonoplast proteins: an example of an example for molecular ecophysiology and the search for eco-enzymes. (In some citations of this article, tonoplast is (auto-?)“corrected” to transport.) Note that this is more commonly spelled with a hyphen; the authors define an eco-enzyme as “an enzyme which shows ecophysiological reactions by (i) mediating adaptations (i.e. in contrast to a house-keeping enzyme), and (ii) undergoing modification itself (i.e. in contrast to a stress enzyme)”. A (hyphenated) use of this sense is found here. I do not see enough uses to satisfy CFI. A very different sense found in the scholarly literature is that of an enzyme produced by E. coli. In the second quotation, is clearly the modern prefix meaning “ecologically sound”, “environment-friendly”, so this is about enzymes (not a “solution”) produced by bacteria (not from kitchen waste) that catalyze a reaction in an environment-friendly way.  --Lambiam 21:14, 7 October 2020 (UTC)

RFV-failed Kiwima (talk) 19:42, 29 December 2020 (UTC)