affinity

(noun)

the attraction between an antibody and an antigen

Related Terms

  • avidity

Examples of affinity in the following topics:

  • Primary Active Transport

    • With the enzyme oriented towards the interior of the cell, the carrier has a high affinity for sodium ions.
    • The protein's affinity for sodium decreases, and the three sodium ions leave the carrier.
    • The shape change increases the carrier's affinity for potassium ions, and two such ions attach to the protein.
    • The carrier protein, in its new configuration, has a decreased affinity for potassium, and the two ions are released into the cytoplasm.
    • The protein now has a higher affinity for sodium ions, and the process starts again.
  • Antibody Functions

    • In fact, antibodies exhibit different affinities (attraction) depending on the molecular complementarity between antigen and antibody molecules .
    • An antibody with a higher affinity for a particular antigen would bind more strongly and stably.
    • Although avidity measures the strength of binding, just as affinity does, the avidity is not simply the sum of the affinities of the antibodies in a multimeric structure.
    • Typically, multimeric antibodies, such as pentameric IgM, are classified as having lower affinity than monomeric antibodies, but high avidity.
  • Transport of Oxygen in the Blood

    • The increase in carbon dioxide and subsequent decrease in pH reduce the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen.
    • Increased temperature, such as from increased activity of skeletal muscle, causes the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen to be reduced.
    • However, the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen may shift to the left or the right depending on environmental conditions.
  • Control of Metabolism Through Enzyme Regulation

    • Their binding induces a conformational change that reduces the affinity of the enzyme's active site for its substrate. 
    • They bind to an allosteric site which induces a conformational change that increases the affinity of the enzyme's active site for its substrate.
    • In contrast, allosteric activators modify the active site of the enzyme so that the affinity for the substrate increases.
  • Regulatory Mechanisms for Cellular Respiration

    • This alteration of the protein's (the enzyme's) structure either increases or decreases its affinity for its substrate, with the effect of increasing or decreasing the rate of the reaction.
  • Catabolite Activator Protein (CAP): An Activator Regulator

    • Two cAMP molecules bind dimeric CAP with negative cooperativity and function as allosteric effectors by increasing the protein's affinity for DNA.
  • Transport of Carbon Dioxide in the Blood

    • Carbon monoxide has a greater affinity for hemoglobin than does oxygen.
  • Endocytosis

    • A targeted variation of endocytosis, known as receptor-mediated endocytosis, employs receptor proteins in the plasma membrane that have a specific binding affinity for certain substances .
  • ATP in Metabolism

    • Phosphorylation by ATP alters the structure of the integral protein that functions as the pump, changing its affinity for sodium and potassium.
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