Water erodes 'lock and key' drug model
17 October 2011 News Archive
Protein binding is not ruled by increases in entropy when ligands displace water, contrary to long-held 'hydrophobic effect' ...
Supramolecular chemistry is finding a lot of uses in the field of self-assembly. But, say Gerardo Odriozola and Marcelo Lozada-Cassou of the Mexican Petroleum Institute, it's still explained using intuitive concepts such as molecular complementarity and recognition. The pair decided to use statistical mechanics to try and define the physical basis for the mechanism, comparing their findings with experimental data.
Odriozola and Lozada-Cassou say in their paper that while 'terms such as "molecular recognition and complementarity" in the SMC [supramolecular chemistry] field are intuitively appealing', they are probably misleading, as the concept of recognition usually involves memory and intelligence, which molecules don't have. Instead, say the pair, the solvent's role is key. As assembly occurs, there is an increase in the volume available to the solvent and that and entropic gain rules the interaction.
17 October 2011 News Archive
Protein binding is not ruled by increases in entropy when ligands displace water, contrary to long-held 'hydrophobic effect' ...
24 March 2010 News Archive
Lock-and-key assembly system could open up a 'galaxy' of possibilities for colloid researchers
13 May 2013 Research
'Liquid fingerprinting' can 'taste' the difference between red wines, mineral waters and vodkas
15 May 2013 Research
The environmental legacy of salvaging gold from electronic waste can be dramatically cut using corn starch instead of cyanide
14 May 2013 News and Analysis
New legislation proposes the appointment of a public champion for research
7 May 2013 News and Analysis
While the EU is zeroing in on neonicotinoids as a major cause of bee deaths, the US is looking elsewhere