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binding affinity

The interaction of ligands with their binding sites can be characterized in terms of a binding affinity. In general, high-affinity ligand binding results from greater attractive forces between the ligand and its receptor while low-affinity ligand binding involves less attractive force. In general, high-affinity binding results in a higher occupancy of the receptor by its ligand than is the case for low-affinity binding; the residence time (lifetime of the receptor-ligand complex) does not correlate. High-affinity binding of ligands to receptors is often physiologically important when some of the binding energy can be used to cause a conformational change in the receptor, resulting in altered behavior for example of an associated ion channel or enzyme. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligand_(biochemistry)#Receptor.2Fligand_binding_affinity

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affinity

Created by Dale Pond. Last Modification: Friday November 11, 2022 04:21:58 MST by Dale Pond.