Receptor-ligand rebinding kinetics in confinement
Aykut Erbas, Monica Olvera de la Cruz, John F. Marko

TL;DR
This study investigates how ligand rebinding kinetics depend on spatial confinement and diffusion, revealing multiple regimes and scaling laws relevant for understanding biomolecular interactions and designing biosensors.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of non-equilibrium rebinding kinetics in confined geometries using scaling laws and molecular dynamics simulations, highlighting different regimes and their dependence on system parameters.
Findings
Rebinding kinetics exhibit multiple power-law regimes before reaching steady state.
The duration of the plateau regime depends on the average separation distance between binding sites.
Reaction-limited cases show delayed power-law behavior with higher affinity ligands.
Abstract
Rebinding kinetics of molecular ligands plays a critical role in biomachinery, from regulatory networks to protein transcription, and is also a key factor for designing drugs and high-precision biosensors.In this study, we investigate initial release and rebinding of ligands to their binding sites grafted on a planar surface, a situation commonly observed in single molecule experiments and which occurs during exocytosis in vivo. Via scaling arguments and molecular dynamic simulations, we analyze the dependence of non-equilibrium rebinding kinetics on two intrinsic length scales: average separation distance between the binding sites and dimensions of diffusion volume (e.g., height of the experimental reservoir in which diffusion takes place or average distance between receptor-bearing surfaces). We obtain time-dependent scaling laws for on rates and for the cumulative number of rebinding…
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