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Allostery: an illustrated definition for the 'second secret of life'

Journal

TRENDS IN BIOCHEMICAL SCIENCES
Volume 33, Issue 9, Pages 420-425

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tibs.2008.05.009

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Funding

  1. NIH [DK78076]

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Although allosteric regulation is the 'second secret of life', the molecular mechanisms that give rise to allostery currently elude understanding. In my opinion, experimental progress is hampered by a commonly used but misleading definition of allostery as protein structural changes that are elicited by the binding of a single ligand. Allostery is more strictly defined in functional terms as a comparison of how one ligand binds in the absence, versus the presence, of a second ligand. Therefore, as each of the two binding events involves two protein complexes, a study of allostery must consider four complexes and not just two. Such a comparison can distinguish allosteric from non-allosteric protein changes, the importance of which is frequently overlooked. When a study of all four complexes is not feasible, an alternative, albeit limited, strategy can identify subsets of allosteric-specific changes.

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