MICR 3230 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: B-Cell Receptor, Cell Signaling, Binding Constant

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Coordination of physiological functions depends on the ability of individual cells to sense changes in their environment and to respond appropriately. A cell interprets its surroundings through the binding of ligands (signaling molecules) to cell-associated receptor (eg. insulin signals high blood glucose) Binding of a ligand to its receptor may induce alterations in the receptor. These changes act to transmit the ligand-binding signal into the interior of the cell, leading to alterations in cellular functions. To allow signal transduction from the ligand to the cell bearing the receptor, a high affinity receptor-ligand interaction is required. There is a very close fit (or degree of complementarity) between the receptor and the ligand. The affinity of the receptor-ligand binding interaction (the strength with which a monovalent ligand interacts with a binding site) The binding reaction of a receptor and a ligand (l):

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