Selected-fit versus induced-fit protein binding: Kinetic differences and mutational analysis
Thomas R. Weikl, Carola von Deuster

TL;DR
This paper compares selected-fit and induced-fit mechanisms of protein-ligand binding, analyzing their kinetic differences and how mutations far from the binding site can distinguish between them.
Contribution
It introduces a simple four-state kinetic model to differentiate selected-fit and induced-fit binding based on rate dependencies and mutation effects.
Findings
Selected-fit binding's on-rate depends on conformational equilibrium.
Induced-fit binding's off-rate depends on conformational equilibrium.
Mutations far from the binding pocket can reveal the binding mechanism.
Abstract
The binding of a ligand molecule to a protein is often accompanied by conformational changes of the protein. A central question is whether the ligand induces the conformational change (induced-fit), or rather selects and stabilizes a complementary conformation from a pre-existing equilibrium of ground and excited states of the protein (selected-fit). We consider here the binding kinetics in a simple four-state model of ligand-protein binding. In this model, the protein has two conformations, which can both bind the ligand. The first conformation is the ground state of the protein when the ligand is off, and the second conformation is the ground state when the ligand is bound. The induced-fit mechanism corresponds to ligand binding in the unbound ground state, and the selected-fit mechanism to ligand binding in the excited state. We find a simple, characteristic difference between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProtein Interaction Studies and Fluorescence Analysis · Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research · Protein Structure and Dynamics
