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  2. Allosteric modulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allosteric_modulator

    The site that an allosteric modulator binds to (i.e., an allosteric site) is not the same one to which an endogenous agonist of the receptor would bind (i.e., an orthosteric site). Modulators and agonists can both be called receptor ligands. [2] Allosteric modulators can be 1 of 3 types either: positive, negative or neutral.

  3. Allosteric regulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allosteric_regulation

    Allosteric regulation of an enzyme. In the fields of biochemistry and pharmacology an allosteric regulator (or allosteric modulator) is a substance that binds to a site on an enzyme or receptor distinct from the active site, resulting in a conformational change that alters the protein's activity, either enhancing or inhibiting its function.

  4. Receptor modulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receptor_modulator

    As for orthosteric and allosteric modulation, this describes the manner in which the ligand binds to the receptor in question: if it binds directly to the prescribed binding site of a receptor, the ligand is orthosteric in this instance; if the ligand alters the receptor by interacting with it at any place other than a binding site, allosteric ...

  5. Binding site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binding_site

    [4] [22] The binding of a ligand to an allosteric site of a multimeric enzyme often induces positive cooperativity, that is the binding of one substrate induces a favorable conformation change and increases the enzyme's likelihood to bind to a second substrate. [23]

  6. Allosteric enzyme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allosteric_enzyme

    Allosteric enzymes are enzymes that change their conformational ensemble upon binding of an effector (allosteric modulator) which results in an apparent change in binding affinity at a different ligand binding site. This "action at a distance" through binding of one ligand affecting the binding of another at a distinctly different site, is the ...

  7. Receptor theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receptor_theory

    An α > 1.0 refers to positive allosteric modulation, an α < 1.0 refers to negative allosteric modulation, and an α = 1.0 means that binding of either ligand to the receptor does not alter the affinity of the other ligand for the receptor (i.e., a neutral modulator). [15]

  8. GABAA receptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GABAA_receptor

    The ionotropic GABA A receptor protein complex is also the molecular target of the benzodiazepine class of tranquilizer drugs. Benzodiazepines do not bind to the same receptor site on the protein complex as does the endogenous ligand GABA (whose binding site is located between α- and β-subunits), but bind to distinct benzodiazepine binding sites situated at the interface between the α- and ...

  9. Ligand-gated ion channel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligand-gated_ion_channel

    These receptor proteins are typically composed of at least two different domains: a transmembrane domain which includes the ion pore, and an extracellular domain which includes the ligand binding location (an allosteric binding site). This modularity has enabled a 'divide and conquer' approach to finding the structure of the proteins ...