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Allosteric proteins have more than one ligand binding site; the binding of a ligand to any of these sites influences the binding of ligands to the other sites. When a protein is allosteric, its binding sites are called coupled or linked. In the case of enzymes, the site that binds to the substrate is known as the active site and the other site is known as the regulatory site. When a ligand binds to the regulatory site, this leads to conformational changes in the protein that can influence the active site of the protein.

Binding site linkages can cause either positive or negative regulation of ligand binding to other sites. In cases where both ligands prefer to bind to the same conformation of a protein, binding at one site increases the affinity of the other site for its respective ligand. This is known as a positive linkage. On the other hand, if the ligands prefer binding to different conformations, binding of one ligand will make it difficult for the second ligand to bind to the protein. This is known as a negative linkage.

Tags
Ligand BindingLinkageConformational ChangesCoupled SitesPositive LinkageNegative LinkageAllosteric ProteinsEnzymesReceptorsStructural ProteinsMotor ProteinsAspartate TranscarbamoylaseATCaseCatalytic SubunitsRegulatory SubunitsPyrimidinesPurinesDNARNAATP

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4.7 : Ligand Binding and Linkage

Protein Function

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4.1 : Ligand Binding Sites

Protein Function

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4.2 : Protein-protein Interfaces

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4.3 : Conserved Binding Sites

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4.4 : The Equilibrium Binding Constant and Binding Strength

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4.5 : Cofactors and Coenzymes

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4.6 : Allosteric Regulation

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4.8 : Cooperative Allosteric Transitions

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4.9 : Phosphorylation

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4.10 : Protein Kinases and Phosphatases

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4.11 : GTPases and their Regulation

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4.12 : Covalently Linked Protein Regulators

Protein Function

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4.13 : Protein Complexes with Interchangeable Parts

Protein Function

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4.14 : Mechanical Protein Functions

Protein Function

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4.15 : Structural Protein Function

Protein Function

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