Hill Coefficient

In biochemistry, the binding of a ligand to a macromolecule is often enhanced if there are already other ligands present on the same macromolecule (this is known as Cooperative binding). The Hill coefficient, named for Archibald Vivian Hill, provides a way to quantify this effect. A coefficient of 1 indicates completely independent binding, regardless of how many additional ligands are already bound. Numbers greater than one indicate positive cooperativity, while numbers less than one indicate negative cooperativity. The Hill coefficient was originally devised to explain the cooperative binding of oxygen to Hemoglobin (a system which has a Hill coefficient of 2.8). See also: Hill equation

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
iso 3166 2:ir
john m. moore
il sodoma
william fargo
warner
rhn grabfeld
murder and killing in hell
pirch
the video
stick around for joy
coral (color)
life's too good
discography of bjrk
elijah baley
coral (disambiguation)
revolutionary communist group
franz klammer
tiddlywinks
chandler
indiana dunes national lakeshore
forest city
slow learner
jdbc type 4 driver
francis blomefield
meredith
standish
elixir
swampy
conley
textile workers strike (1934)
roy spencer
spanair
thaipusam
elberta
stanage edge
john starks
chimalman
newnet
u.s. highway 94
zeng guofan
henry, virginia
guaranteed minimum income
block matrix
kinder scout