The use of nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shift perturbation to monitor changes taking place around the binding site of a ligand–protein interaction is a routine and widely applied methodology in the field of protein biochemistry. Shifts are often acquired by titrating various concentrations of ligand to a fixed concentration of the receptor and may serve the purpose, among others, of determining affinity constants, locating binding surfaces, or differentiating between binding mechanisms. Shifts are quantified by the so-called combined chemical shift difference. Although the directionality of shift changes is often used for detailed analysis of specific cases, the approach has not been adapted in standard chemical shift monitoring. Thi...
Molecular recognition is a key process in the formation of ligand-protein complexes concerning both ...
BACKGROUND: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy offers a variety of experiments to study p...
The distribution of chemical shifts in 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of water-soluble, diama...
The use of nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shift perturbation to monitor changes taking place ar...
The use of nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shift perturbation to monitor changes taking place ar...
We have carried out chemical shift perturbation titrations on three contrasting proteins. The result...
We have carried out chemical shift perturbation titrations on three contrasting proteins. The result...
Protein-ligand binding is a puzzling process. Many theories have been devised since the pioneering k...
A review of the Progress in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy journal discusses the roles that...
NMR is one of the major techniques for investigating the structure, dynamics and interactions betwee...
NMR is one of the major techniques for investigating the structure, dynamics and interactions betwee...
NMR is one of the major techniques for investigating the structure, dynamics and interactions betwee...
International audienceIn this chapter, we describe how NMR chemical shift titrations can be used to ...
Protein chemical shift perturbations (CSPs), upon ligand binding, can be used to refine the structur...
<p>Histogram of chemical shift perturbations induced in darcin (blue) and MUP11 (orange) in the pres...
Molecular recognition is a key process in the formation of ligand-protein complexes concerning both ...
BACKGROUND: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy offers a variety of experiments to study p...
The distribution of chemical shifts in 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of water-soluble, diama...
The use of nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shift perturbation to monitor changes taking place ar...
The use of nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shift perturbation to monitor changes taking place ar...
We have carried out chemical shift perturbation titrations on three contrasting proteins. The result...
We have carried out chemical shift perturbation titrations on three contrasting proteins. The result...
Protein-ligand binding is a puzzling process. Many theories have been devised since the pioneering k...
A review of the Progress in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy journal discusses the roles that...
NMR is one of the major techniques for investigating the structure, dynamics and interactions betwee...
NMR is one of the major techniques for investigating the structure, dynamics and interactions betwee...
NMR is one of the major techniques for investigating the structure, dynamics and interactions betwee...
International audienceIn this chapter, we describe how NMR chemical shift titrations can be used to ...
Protein chemical shift perturbations (CSPs), upon ligand binding, can be used to refine the structur...
<p>Histogram of chemical shift perturbations induced in darcin (blue) and MUP11 (orange) in the pres...
Molecular recognition is a key process in the formation of ligand-protein complexes concerning both ...
BACKGROUND: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy offers a variety of experiments to study p...
The distribution of chemical shifts in 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of water-soluble, diama...