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  5. The Molecular Origin of Enthalpy/Entropy Compensation in Biomolecular Recognition

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Article
en
2018

The Molecular Origin of Enthalpy/Entropy Compensation in Biomolecular Recognition

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en
2018
Vol 47 (1)
Vol. 47
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-biophys-070816-033743

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George M M Whitesides
George M M Whitesides

Harvard University

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Jerome M. Fox
Mengxia Zhao
M. Fink
+2 more

Abstract

Biomolecular recognition can be stubborn; changes in the structures of associating molecules, or the environments in which they associate, often yield compensating changes in enthalpies and entropies of binding and no net change in affinities. This phenomenon—termed enthalpy/entropy (H/S) compensation—hinders efforts in biomolecular design, and its incidence—often a surprise to experimentalists—makes interactions between biomolecules difficult to predict. Although characterizing H/S compensation requires experimental care, it is unquestionably a real phenomenon that has, from an engineering perspective, useful physical origins. Studying H/S compensation can help illuminate the still-murky roles of water and dynamics in biomolecular recognition and self-assembly. This review summarizes known sources of H/ S compensation (real and perceived) and lays out a conceptual framework for understanding and dissecting—and, perhaps, avoiding or exploiting—this phenomenon in biophysical systems.

How to cite this publication

Jerome M. Fox, Mengxia Zhao, M. Fink, Kyungtae Kang, George M M Whitesides (2018). The Molecular Origin of Enthalpy/Entropy Compensation in Biomolecular Recognition. , 47(1), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-biophys-070816-033743.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2018

Authors

5

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-biophys-070816-033743

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