Ligand

(Biochemistry)

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Biochemistry
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What is Ligand (biochemistry)?

In biochemistry and pharmacology, a ligand is a substance that forms a complex with a biomolecule to serve a biological purpose. In protein-ligand binding, the ligand is usually a molecule which produces a signal by binding to a site on a target protein. The binding typically results in a change of conformational isomerism (conformation) of the target protein. In DNA-ligand binding studies, the ligand can be a small molecule, ion, or protein which binds to the DNA double helix. The relationship between ligand and binding partner is a function of charge, hydrophobicity, and molecular structure. The instance of binding occurs over an infinitesimal range of time and space, so the rate constant is usually a very small number. Binding occurs by intermolecular forces, such as ionic bonds, hydrogen bonds and Van der Waals forces. The association or docking is actually reversible through dissociation. Measurably irreversible covalent bonding between a ligand and target molecule is atypical in biological systems. In contrast to the definition of ligand in metalorganic and inorganic chemistry, in biochemistry it is ambiguous whether the ligand generally binds at a metal site, as is the case in hemoglobin. In general, the interpretation of ligand is contextual with regards to what sort of binding has been observed. The etymology stems from ligare, which means 'to bind'. Ligand binding to a receptor protein alters the conformation by affecting the three-dimensional shape orientation. The conformation of a receptor protein composes the functional state. Ligands include substrates, inhibitors, activators, signaling lipids, and neurotransmitters. The rate of binding is called , and this measurement typifies a tendency or strength of the effect. Binding affinity is actualized not only by host–guest interactions, but also by solvent effects that can play a dominant, steric role which drives non-covalent binding in solution. The solvent provides a chemical environment for the ligand and receptor to adapt, and thus accept or reject each other as partners. Radioligands are radioisotope labeled compounds used in vivo as tracers in PET studies and for in vitro binding studies.

Technology Types

biochemistrybiomoleculecell signalingchelating agentchemicalchemical bondingcompoundcoordination chemistryligands biochemistrymacromoleculematerialmoleculeorganic compoundproteinsubstance

Translations

liganlïgandligand in biochemistryligandiligandoligandumligandusliganteliogannlligandperantoproteïenligandυποκαταστάτηςлигандлігандליגנדربيطةلىيگاندلیگاندলিগ্যান্ডஏற்பிணைப்பிลิแกนด์리간드リガンド配体配體

Synonyms

absolute affinitiesabsolute affinityabsolute binding affinitiesabsolute binding affinityaddenaddendaffinityambidentate ligandbidentate ligandbinding affinitiesbinding affinitybinucleating ligandbiological ligandbulky ligandcomplexing agentcoordinatdenticitàendogenous ligandinhibition constantinhibition rate constantinhibitory rate constantkompleksagensl-type ligandligandligand bindingligand exchangeligand exchange reactionligandenligandoligandos... 35 more

RelatedTo

complex (chemistry)

Co-Occuring

3d3d-to-2danalysesaspartate-racemasebinding-motifsbinding-sitesbioactivitybioinformaticschemblchemicalchemistrychemoinformaticscomputational-proteomicscomputationalbiologyconformerconsensusconservationconservation-scoresdecision-treesdockingdrugdrug-discoverydrugsdtidti-predictionecfp4electrostatic-potentialfingerprintgraphgraph-statistics... 55 more

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    Sources: DBpedia, Github, Wikidata
     — Date merged: 2/4/2022, 5:47:15 PM
     — Date scraped: 5/20/2021, 4:54:03 PM