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1 myosin-1C-EGFP as a model system and fit its binding curve.
2 ncurring a much smaller change in the ligand binding curve.
3 on of multiple concentrations to arrive at a binding curve.
4 medium caused a rightward shift in the force-binding curve.
5 ate from the DNA, resulting in a bell-shaped binding curve.
6 H) to measure the sigmoidal character of the binding curve.
7 bound ligand, leading to a model-independent binding curve.
8  and a partially hyperbolic shape for the O2 binding curve.
9 amer into dimers, leading to a sigmoidal DNA binding curve.
10 tely 5 mol of spermine/mol with a hyperbolic binding curve.
11  cooperative transition observed in the Mn2+ binding curve.
12 ionic strength the data fit best to a simple binding curve.
13 els, generating association and dissociation binding curves.
14 d directly on arrays by obtaining saturation binding curves.
15 resultant images to generate individual-site binding curves.
16 of the IgA1 N-glycans yielded superimposable binding curves.
17 ffered considerably in the complexity of the binding curves.
18 els to fit our real-time experimental Cu(II)-binding curves.
19  fetal receptors with shallow but monophasic binding curves.
20 istent with the preference of Arp2/3 complex binding curved actin filaments.
21 ely 7 mol of spermine exhibiting a sigmoidal binding curve and a Hill coefficient of 1.4.
22 RNA-binding proteins, RBPBind computes their binding curve and effective binding constant.
23 range of initial binding ratios to yield the binding curve and equilibrium constant as in the usual g
24 olves the paradox of a coexisting hyperbolic binding curve and highly skewed substrate-free T-R equil
25 s of S1 the binding complications deform the binding curve and produce nonlinear transforms ("anomalo
26                                Measuring the binding curve and stoichiometry of protein complexes in
27 s from the sample mixture and determines the binding curve and stoichiometry of the protein complex.
28  binding by unregulated S1 followed a normal binding curve and was not affected by the presence of nu
29                    We showed indirectly from binding curves and directly from fluorescence-detection
30 nel microfluidic devices to acquire one-shot binding curves and protein binding kinetic data.
31  Global fit analyses of experimental glucose binding curves are consistent with a kinetic model that
32 re offered by this method: (i) Hemoglobin-O2 binding curves are obtained rapidly and reproducibly; (i
33          Finally, we observed a break in the binding curve around zero bits of information.
34 d or curve fitting analysis of the titration binding curves as a reliable means to quantitate the bin
35 an atypical isothermal-titration-calorimetry-binding curve at low-salt aqueous solutions whereby the
36 es two adjacent IRF dimers, with a sigmoidal binding curve at the distal site rendering it ultrasensi
37                               The inhibition binding curves at various cell concentrations were compa
38 ther lowered because the shape of the oxygen binding curve becomes completely sigmoidal.
39 system, we successfully recorded 25 separate binding curves between glutathione S-transferase (GST) a
40                       Fluorescence-monitored binding curves between gp45 and ATP-activated gp44/62 re
41  hyperbola: at high concentrations of S1 the binding curve can be transformed into a linear plot ("no
42                                   Its oxygen binding curve, cooperativity, response to allosteric eff
43  protein expression levels, and a fit of the binding curve determines the number of binding sites and
44 ng of myosin subfragment 1, to actin but the binding curves differed significantly between the constr
45 n EB1 and tubulin can exceed 1:1, and EB1-MT binding curves do not fit simple binding models.
46 riation in the range of 3-7% across the DJ-1 binding curve down to a concentration of 30 pM, near the
47                                              Binding curves fit perfectly to Hill-Waud models, and th
48 re and the cooperativity that is seen in the binding curves for alamethicin are postulated to be a re
49                                          The binding curves for both skeletal and cardiac calsequestr
50         Assay conditions were optimized, the binding curves for C-reactive protein (CRP) in buffer an
51                                              Binding curves for ligand densities ranging from 0.1 to
52 , distinct affinities were not resolvable in binding curves for mixed-affinity binders (MABs), which
53               The model predicts equilibrium binding curves for myosin-S1 and TnI as a function of th
54                         130C037 gave shallow binding curves for PKC isoforms alpha, beta, gamma, delt
55                                    Sigmoidal binding curves for titration of BioI with azole drugs su
56 through numerical simulations of the kinetic binding curves for various assay conditions.
57  droplets are shown to yield high-resolution binding curves from which precise dissociation constants
58                      Further analysis of the binding curves in terms of a nonspecific binding model i
59 cence quenching assays, and the shape of the binding curve indicated a single specific urea-binding s
60                                 The membrane binding curve is constructed by mapping those concentrat
61 e assumed intermolecular interactions on the binding curves (isotherms).
62 For this, differences were maximized between binding curve kinetic parameters for probes binding to c
63 n by reducing differences in sensor gain and binding curve midpoint.
64 d forms of the mutants exhibit biphasic Ca2+ binding curves, nearly identical to that observed for wi
65 ity filter produces the shape of the calcium binding curves observed in experiment, and it predicts B
66                         The antibody/antigen binding curves obtained by this approach can be used to
67  the formation of the complex by fitting the binding curves obtained experimentally to a model based
68                             In addition, the binding curves obtained with 8A11-Cy5 and DCP-UO22+ spec
69                                              Binding curves obtained with aminobenzyl-DTPA or its com
70                                              Binding curves obtained with DCP-UO22+ and the bivalent
71  derivatives of Cy5 or Alexa 488 altered the binding curves obtained with DCP-UO22+ from hyperbolic t
72                                              Binding curves obtained with DTPA and a cyclohexyl deriv
73                                              Binding curves obtained with the Hg(II) and Cd(II) compl
74                                              Binding curves obtained with the Pb(II) and In(III) comp
75                              Analyses of the binding curves obtained with this technique immediately
76 gmoidal in contrast to the hyperbolic-shaped binding curve of delta369.
77                             The shape of the binding curve of full-length Tnp is sigmoidal in contras
78                                          The binding curve of myosin subfragment-1 (S1) to F-actin is
79 ges are counted to create digital adsorption binding curves of single 220 nm HNPs from picomolar nano
80                                       Oxygen binding curves of sol-gel-encapsulated deoxy human adult
81 difference in stoichiometry by measuring the binding curves of the full-length proteins in living cel
82                    The shapes of competition binding curves of various interacting partners construct
83 nables the collection of a complete Langmuir binding curve on a single sensor surface.
84 on the surface, generating multiple antibody binding curves, one in each single nanolitre-volume comp
85 P9/G10.1 site did not result in the biphasic binding curve predicted from other models involving two
86 al behavior, greatly steepening the beacon's binding curve relative to that of the parent receptor.
87 ectral simulations allow the construction of binding curves, revealing two different binding states (
88 exation occurred (K(assoc) > or = 150 M(-1); binding curve saturation approximately > or =50%) betwee
89                                  Association binding curves showed that steady state occurred rapidly
90 d from three different models applied to the binding curves suggest that binding of a protein to a li
91 ceable, was saturable, and yielded a typical binding curve, suggesting that specific receptor-ligand
92                  The sigmoidal nature of the binding curve suggests that SecA in lipids has two confo
93 regulation, we established the physiological binding curves that describe the binding of Bub3-Bub1 an
94                  For each digital adsorption binding curve, the average single nanoparticle SPRM refl
95                       This enabled an entire binding curve to be obtained in a single experiment.
96 , or substituting Trp(2) for Ala reduces the binding curves to a simple, monophasic rise in binding p
97                           The method allowed binding curves to be acquired with excellent signal-to-n
98                                 Published S1 binding curves to regulated filaments with different tro
99                      Fittings of NMR and ITC binding curves to the Hill model yielded n(Hill) ~2.9, n
100 EKK1 TOG demonstrates a clear preference for binding curved tubulin heterodimers, which exist in solu
101 itro, it is practical to generate a complete binding curve using the normalized cross-correlation sig
102                                          The binding curve was sigmoidal exhibiting an IC(50) of appr
103                                          The binding curve was weakly cooperative, implying interacti
104 lized with GM 1, DNP, and biotin lipids, and binding curves was generated by recording surface fluore
105                                          The binding curves were almost identical for both fibrillar
106                          Competitive agonist binding curves were biphasic (high-affinity IC50 = 3.9 p
107 % by excess unlabeled PCSK9, and competition binding curves were consistent with a one-site binding m
108                                          All binding curves were established and limits of detection
109 inding potential (BP(ND)), and 1- and 2-site binding curves were fitted to these data to measure (11)
110                                          The binding curves were found to fit the functional form of
111                                       Ca(2+) binding curves were measured using atomic absorption spe
112                                   Hyperbolic binding curves were obtained regardless of whether the c
113                                              Binding curves were quantitatively explained by a new st
114 oth models generate very similar families of binding curves when [S1]/[actin] is varied.
115 he concentration of a 23-nt target follows a binding curve with an approximate 1:1 stoichiometry and
116 pendent and saturable and can be fitted to a binding curve with an equilibrium constant K(Hal) = 2.1
117 The appendix contains an analysis of several binding curves with multiple binding site models.
118                                   Therefore, binding curves with nH>1 provide a direct measure of coo
119        The absorbance shift follows a simple binding curve, with an apparent dissociation constant of

 
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