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1 pyrophosphate release (or fast pyrophosphate rebinding).
2 lso necessary for proper GTP binding (or GDP rebinding).
3 discard" short dsRNA rapidly and to suppress rebinding.
4 n or slowly evolving on the time scale of CO rebinding.
5 ith receptor equilibration limited by ligand rebinding.
6 se of SpoIID from the complex and subsequent rebinding.
7 resents a negligible enthalpic barrier to NO rebinding.
8 cheme, which unrealistically forbids product rebinding.
9             The results are compared with NO rebinding.
10 ure the rates of cross-bridge detachment and rebinding.
11  after agonist exposures too brief to permit rebinding.
12 increased to a t(1/2) of 1.6 h by preventing rebinding.
13 ncy and the innermost barrier controlling CO rebinding.
14 id phase (25-30% amplitude) of O(2) geminate rebinding.
15  are increased, with less consequence for CO rebinding.
16 iation processes under conditions minimizing rebinding.
17 structure that allows nucleotide release and rebinding.
18 and force-induced cross-linker unbinding and rebinding.
19 , consistent with membrane retention via SH2 rebinding.
20 g site that prevents released phosphate from rebinding.
21 stabilizing empty MHC I and impeding peptide rebinding.
22 mational alterations that enhance subsequent rebinding.
23 protonation as well as a reduction before OH rebinding.
24 " mechanism of concerted SEC11 debinding and rebinding.
25 ction accounting for the effects of TCR-pMHC rebinding.
26 he subsequent geminate rebinding reaction (t(rebinding) = 31.6 ps) by monitoring infrared bleach reco
27 ation occur, contrary to sGC, followed by NO rebinding (7 ps) and back-reduction (230 ps and 2 ns).
28 d of transcription by detaching from DNA and rebinding a new promoter.
29 ation between MIP chemical structure and its rebinding ability.
30  receptor sites with significantly increased rebinding affinity for the template.
31 uscule vesicle volume that facilitates rapid rebinding after dissociation.
32 HbA lead to markedly biphasic bimolecular CO rebinding after laser photolysis.
33 e in the crowded cellular environment, since rebinding after the first phosphorylation is enhanced by
34                         Kinetics of geminate rebinding also suggest that quaternary enhancement may b
35 e the large amplitude picosecond CO geminate rebinding and find that it is correlated with the absenc
36 , MutS undergoes frequent cycles of mismatch rebinding and mobile clamp reformation without releasing
37 ne proteins that were biotinylated following rebinding and photoactivation of labeled GAPDH, aldolase
38 s in the free energy barriers throughout the rebinding and release pathway upon increase of the pH ar
39 a local effect: a cluster promotes the rapid rebinding and second activation of singly activated subs
40 lytical estimate of the probability of rapid rebinding and show that well-mixed ordinary differential
41 d that bistability is compromised by product rebinding and that unrealistic assumptions on enzyme mec
42 nts, higher glycerol concentrations increase rebinding (and decrease the fluorescence recovery rate)
43             Higher Fab concentrations reduce rebinding (and increase the fluorescence recovery rate)
44  performance was evaluated using equilibrium rebinding assays.
45 work, a general analytical theory for ligand rebinding at cell surfaces was developed for a reversibl
46 ial site was followed by RT dissociation and rebinding at the -7 cleavage site, and the dissociation
47 ons which follow from the general theory for rebinding at the membrane surface.
48 turns over Exo1, multiple cycles of nuclease rebinding at the same DNA site can still support limited
49 a two exponential fit to time courses for CO rebinding at varying CO concentrations yields rate const
50 mperature measurements of the enthalpic MbCO rebinding barrier (18 +/- 2 kJ/mol).
51 midazole ligand reveals the magnitude of the rebinding barrier associated with proximal histidine lig
52  approximately 180 K), the average enthalpic rebinding barrier for H(2)O-PPIX-CO was found to be appr
53 sessed and it is found that the enthalpic CO rebinding barrier is increased significantly when imidaz
54                     The electronic coupling, rebinding barrier, and Landau-Zener force terms can be o
55 d the enthalpic contribution to the proximal rebinding barrier, H(p), to be 11 +/- 2 kJ/mol.
56 titatively using a distribution of enthalpic rebinding barriers associated with heterogeneity in the
57 lumination, discrete populations with higher rebinding barriers were observed.
58             We have characterized the ligand-rebinding behavior of single crystal native sperm whale
59  species was necessary to model the enhanced rebinding below 30 K, which likely appears because of qu
60 rating the very fast dynamics and remarkable rebinding capabilities of the intramolecular donor-accep
61 ong with a decrease in the fraction of hemes rebinding CO with the slow rate constant characteristic
62                                          ATP rebinding could then cause reversal of this structural t
63 nerate the geminate and solvent phase ligand rebinding curves for photodissociated COHbY.
64                  Finally, we show that rapid rebindings drastically alter the reaction's Michaelis-Me
65  find that the displaced SBF is blocked from rebinding due to incorporation of its recognition sites
66  as well as slow rather than fast dynamic LH rebinding (due to DNA stem destabilization), and low com
67 ase can be correlated to varying the release-rebinding equilibrium of IMC, through simulation.
68 tomated docking by AutoDock, and spontaneous rebinding events in unbiased molecular dynamics simulati
69 inside the microtubule bundle is hindered by rebinding events when open sites are within approximatel
70 or on rates and for the cumulative number of rebinding events.
71  diffusible volume, the cumulative number of rebindings exhibits a novel, to our knowledge, plateau b
72 ng properties, the MIP was analyzed by batch rebinding experiments and subsequently used as SPE sorbe
73              The results obtained from batch rebinding experiments showed the presence of two associa
74 is presented that explains a variety of MbNO rebinding experiments, including the dependence of the k
75 static equilibrium and complementary dynamic rebinding experiments.
76                                          The rebinding features of the MIP film were evaluated by ele
77 derivatives following rapid mixing and of CO rebinding following flash photolysis have been examined
78 ft the proximal heme pocket and requiring NO rebinding from solution to proceed via the distal heme f
79 seconds that can be directly associated with rebinding from specific hydrophobic cavities.
80  A, can be assigned, respectively, to ligand rebinding from the following: (i) the distal heme pocket
81 cular phase representing second-order ligand rebinding from the solvent.
82                 As a result of water release/rebinding from/to the coproduct formation site the Compo
83        Such impulsive bond breaking and late rebinding generate proteinquakes and strongly perturb th
84           These three phases are ascribed to rebinding: (i) from the distal heme pocket, (ii) from th
85 absorption recovery, analogous to methionine rebinding in photolyzed ferrous cytochrome c.
86  importin alpha5 but rather to prevent cargo rebinding in preparation for recycling.
87 g to one subunit decreases the rate of Pro-2 rebinding in the second, leading to a net increase in af
88  study the ultrafast dynamics of geminate CO rebinding in two CooA homologues, Rhodospirillum rubrum
89  CYP3A4 and the amplitude of the geminate CO rebinding increased significantly as a result of binding
90 city for one substrate over another drops as rebinding increases and pseudo-processive behavior becom
91 ach indicates that the probability of ligand rebinding increases exponentially with the number of sit
92 ed signaling pathway exhibits high levels of rebinding-induced pseudo-processivity, unlike other prop
93 ated tRNA and shows that trans editing after rebinding is a competent kinetic pathway.
94                            Moreover, induced rebinding is able to reproduce the striking, and hithert
95                                           CO rebinding is expected to compete with protein folding an
96 ver, this loss of specificity with increased rebinding is typically also observed if two distinct enz
97 A was also investigated, and although the CO rebinding kinetics are significantly perturbed, there ar
98                        The nonexponential CO rebinding kinetics at both pH 5 and pH 7 are accounted f
99                 Below approximately 60 K the rebinding kinetics do not follow these predictions unles
100 O for both trHbs, time-dependent biphasic CO rebinding kinetics for P-trHb at low CO partial pressure
101 work compares the geminate and solvent phase rebinding kinetics from two trHbs, one from the ciliated
102 the ligand access channel as indicated by CO rebinding kinetics in flash photolysis experiments.
103 e), we observe significant effects on the CO rebinding kinetics in the 10 ns to 10 ms time window.
104                                       The CO rebinding kinetics in these CooA complexes take place on
105 e distal pocket is mutated (e.g., V68W), the rebinding kinetics lack the slow phase.
106 brational coherence spectra and nitric oxide rebinding kinetics of Caldariomyces fumago chloroperoxid
107                                          The rebinding kinetics of CO to protoheme (FePPIX) in the pr
108                                              Rebinding kinetics of molecular ligands plays a key role
109                            We also report CO rebinding kinetics of MP in the 150 fs to 140 ps time wi
110   Comparison of the temperature-dependent NO rebinding kinetics of native Mb with that of the bare he
111                            In this work, the rebinding kinetics of NO and CO to NP4 are investigated
112                                          The rebinding kinetics of NO to the heme iron of myoglobin (
113                         Comparison of the CO rebinding kinetics of RrCooA, truncated RrCooA, and DNA-
114                 We show that the removal and rebinding kinetics of the template and various potential
115  we analyze the dependence of nonequilibrium rebinding kinetics on two intrinsic length scales: the a
116                   Careful analysis of the CO rebinding kinetics reveals that in NP4 and, to a larger
117 sual because most other heme systems have CO rebinding kinetics that are too slow to make the measure
118                          The response of the rebinding kinetics to temperature, ligand concentration,
119 ntrol, an analogous increase in the geminate rebinding kinetics was not observed.
120 8-ns photodissociation quantum yield and the rebinding kinetics, point to a pivotal functional role f
121 udy proximal and distal influences on ligand rebinding kinetics.
122 e influence of the proximal ligand on the CO rebinding kinetics.
123 ulation-specific differences in the observed rebinding kinetics.
124  experiments showed overall fast biphasic CO rebinding kinetics.
125 DM-catalyzed dissociation of each isomer and rebinding, leading to a final isomer composition determi
126 s is followed by dissociation and subsequent rebinding, leading ultimately to a preponderance of the
127                     However, when the two CO rebinding lifetimes are extended into milliseconds by re
128                   Thus, occlusion of complex rebinding may play a significant role in a variety of bi
129 vidently occurred by an affinity release and rebinding mechanism that did not require motor activity
130   Our data are well explained by the sliding-rebinding model for catch-slip bonds extended to incorpo
131              EPS are robustly predicted by a rebinding model that considers the microenvironment of p
132      We also found that, consistent with the rebinding model, the effective diffusion constant is neg
133                  Both allosteric and sliding-rebinding models have emerged to explain catch bonds.
134                             The dinucleotide rebinding observed as inhibition under these conditions
135 tation of nitrosylated sGC, only NO geminate rebinding occurs in 7.5 ps.
136                                              Rebinding occurs when the TCR-pMHC on-rate outcompetes T
137 y of a net increase in base pairing, whereas rebinding of 'recovery' strands is favored at higher tem
138       The data presented here show that weak rebinding of a single PsbO subunit to PsbO-depleted PSII
139 o the kinetic model to account for potential rebinding of accumulated solution NO.
140                                        Also, rebinding of ACPs dampens full relaxation of stress.
141 of P2X3 by nanomolar [agonist] occurs by the rebinding of agonist to desensitized channels before rec
142  for its acetylation sites, due to the rapid rebinding of alphaTAT1 onto highly concentrated alpha-tu
143 fected by the buried water molecules and the rebinding of an external K(+) ion.
144 straction of a hydrogen atom followed by the rebinding of an OH group.
145 ion of Aurora B kinase activity prevents the rebinding of BubR1 to metaphase kinetochores after a red
146 ity is chelator-insensitive, indicating that rebinding of Ca(2+) restores the structural integrity of
147 bsequent restoration of dark [Ca2+]i and the rebinding of Ca2+ to its release site, but after brighte
148 vation or a slow conformational change after rebinding of Ca2+ to SR regulatory proteins.
149 ot produce conformational changes that block rebinding of cation.
150                                        Rapid rebinding of CD8 to MHC suggests a dual role of CD8 in f
151                                              Rebinding of CO and of Cys-52 following CO photodissocia
152                 Measurements of the geminate rebinding of CO establish a kinetic difference between t
153 ing of CO to C-trHb, very fast solvent phase rebinding of CO for both trHbs, time-dependent biphasic
154 dications of ultrafast (picosecond) geminate rebinding of CO to C-trHb, very fast solvent phase rebin
155                 Thus, in human erythrocytes, rebinding of DADMe-ImmH is 50-fold more likely than diff
156  inhibits replication by promoting continual rebinding of DnaC to DnaB and consequent prevention of h
157                  (2) The rate of binding and rebinding of dNTP to captured complexes affects dwell ti
158 hotobleaching also revealed dissociation and rebinding of EB1 to the microtubule wall with a similar
159 ) state upon substrate hydroxylation (k(2)), rebinding of excess substrates (k(3)), and indicated tha
160                                              Rebinding of FMN at these conditions is nominal, and the
161 in the presence of a protein trap to prevent rebinding of free protein to the DNA using the methods d
162 rphine-MOR complex for beta-arrestin and the rebinding of Galphai2 after GTP hydrolysis retained the
163                                              Rebinding of hyperphosphorylated cyclin E--Cdk2 to inter
164 e supported by our data involves binding and rebinding of InlB to multiple binding sites on heparin i
165 is study, we investigate initial release and rebinding of ligands to their binding sites grafted on a
166    These changes are partially reversed upon rebinding of M(O2CR)2 at room temperature ( approximatel
167 es the low-temperature stretched exponential rebinding of MbCO to a quenched distribution of heme geo
168                                At high Mg2+, rebinding of Mg2+ to E.ADP forces release of ADP from th
169 nges of actin are caused by dissociation and rebinding of myosin cross-bridges, and that during contr
170 e cofactor, consistent with some release and rebinding of NAD+ during catalytic cycles.
171 T pathway which involves loss of NADP(+) and rebinding of NADPH to precede loss of the product H4F (n
172 cooperative process, which favours immediate rebinding of newly dissociated pb10 to the 120 hexamers
173  7 ps kinetic phase that we attribute to the rebinding of NO directly from the distal pocket.
174                           In both cases, the rebinding of NO induces the cleavage of the Fe-His bond
175 icates that one or more barriers that impede rebinding of oxygen from docking sites in the heme pocke
176 ed by the mutations, the picosecond geminate rebinding of oxygen is at most minimally affected.
177  here that the extent of nanosecond geminate rebinding of oxygen to the variant and its isolated beta
178 were generated for the nanosecond and slower rebinding of photodissociated CO to trHbN in solution an
179 otubules when dephosphorylation of CENP-E or rebinding of PP1 to CENP-E is blocked.
180 f N-propargyliminoglycine and the subsequent rebinding of propynal to the enzyme make the latter mech
181 oscopy (EIS) was used to evaluate subsequent rebinding of PSA to the apta-MIP surface.
182 crease of [Kglutamate] beyond 1 M results in rebinding of salt-displaced polymerase to DNA.
183 ot be explained by differential retention or rebinding of sigma70 during elongation, or by differenti
184 ions (near-geminate combination of NO versus rebinding of solution NO) on catalytic behavior of each
185  dinucleotide synthesis is proposed in which rebinding of the dinucleotide to the enzyme-DNA complex
186 enes xylosoxidans (AXCP) in which picosecond rebinding of the endogenous His ligand following heme-NO
187 ide-free Ran in a conformation that prevents rebinding of the guanine nucleotide.
188 ysis and product release steps promote tight rebinding of the helicase to the nucleic acid.
189           For this protein, dissociation and rebinding of the hexacoordinating amino acid side chain,
190                 However, if dissociation and rebinding of the machines occurs at a finite rate (finit
191 tein to the other, as opposed to release and rebinding of the metalloid.
192                              MutS's frequent rebinding of the mismatch, which increases its residence
193 ock circumvention involves the unbinding and rebinding of the motors.
194  (k(NO) = 1.4 x 10(11) s(-1)) and shown that rebinding of the proximal histidine to the 4-coordinate
195 eaper-induced apoptosis, most likely through rebinding of the released factors.
196                                    Selective rebinding of the target analyte was observed as a freque
197                                          The rebinding of the target analytes to their fragments' cav
198 ted bimolecular complexes by occluding rapid rebinding of the two binding partners.
199 ficant desensitization occurs in response to rebinding of transmitter to the AMPA receptors.
200 u = 225 and 880 micros, are attributed to CO rebinding on the basis of mixed-gas experiments.
201    The dependency of the apparent rate of CO rebinding on the intensity of the probe beam in single-w
202 (E11) mutation causes drastic differences in rebinding on the nanosecond time scale, whereas the effe
203          For diffusion-limited binding, the (rebinding) on rate decreases with time via multiple powe
204 proximal NO by precluding direct proximal NO rebinding once it has left the proximal heme pocket and
205 he spectral changes, they clearly involve CO rebinding or changes in the environment of an already bo
206                       Transmitter diffusion, rebinding, or slow deactivation kinetics of channels are
207 ggest an alternative to the hydroxyl radical rebinding paradigm.
208 a time and probed the stochastic rupture and rebinding paths.
209 the appearance and disappearance of internal rebinding phases in the absence of steric and polar inte
210 relaxation properties of HbY on the geminate rebinding process forms the basis of a model that accoun
211 that the fast (enthalpically barrierless) NO rebinding process observed below 200 K is independent of
212 ter laser photolysis to enhance the geminate rebinding process within the photoproduct.
213 imately 1 and 190 mus, prior to the 20 ms CO rebinding process.
214 pe, and functionality during selective 2,4-D rebinding processes confirming the results obtained duri
215  changes, internal electron transfer, and CO rebinding processes in cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodoba
216 ass transition (Tg approximately 180 K), the rebinding progress slows as temperature increases, and t
217 allowed isolation of polymers with very good rebinding properties and sensitivities.
218                                          The rebinding property of the MIP film was studied by using
219      We also observe that the bimolecular NO rebinding rate is enhanced by 3 orders of magnitude both
220                 Further comparison of the CO rebinding rate of the imidazole bound protoheme with the
221 plitude geminate phase with a fundamental CO rebinding rate that is approximately 45 times faster tha
222 RecA filament on the DNA was observed with a rebinding rate two orders of magnitude greater than in t
223                                   The Cys-52 rebinding rate, 4000 s(-1), is essentially unchanged bet
224                                          The rebinding rates for the native and mutant species are si
225 provide a complete description that explains rebinding rates that range from femtoseconds to millisec
226 tting observation of the subsequent geminate rebinding reaction (t(rebinding) = 31.6 ps) by monitorin
227 rophores Cy3 and Cy5 to quantify the melting/rebinding reaction by fluorescence resonance energy tran
228                     Further insight into the rebinding reaction was obtained by mapping the full pote
229        The photoproduct undergoes subsequent rebinding/recovery with a time constant of approximately
230                                 Importantly, rebinding requires that connections be added to the well
231 olecule called the 'template' and capable of rebinding selectively to this target molecule.
232 printed nanomaterials exhibited satisfactory rebinding selectivity, kinetics and reusability.
233 actor (NADP(+)) release and cofactor (NADPH) rebinding, show different temperature dependences for PO
234 s induced by GnRH were most likely caused by rebinding since over 70% of the original response was ab
235 g and approximately 60 K, the nonexponential rebinding slows down as the temperature is lowered and t
236 ve enzymes can act processively due to rapid rebindings (so-called quasi-processivity).
237                                     Geminate-rebinding studies on these mutants indicate that disrupt
238                Biochemical fractionation and rebinding studies support a model in which Oda7 particip
239                              The comparative rebinding studies with AuNP-MIP and non-imprinted polyme
240  T-like structure persists well after ligand rebinding, suggesting a slow T-to-R transition.
241 s in time constants associated with geminate rebinding, tertiary relaxation, and quaternary relaxatio
242                                     In batch rebinding tests, the imprinted nanocomposites reached sa
243 reatly higher imprinting factor and specific rebinding than obtained with the same recipe but by solu
244 sink method was used to prevent analyte from rebinding the ligand-coated Octet tips and enabled us to
245                                         Upon rebinding, the TNV-polythiophene complex changes the flu
246                Thus, one method by which the rebinding theory can be tested is to use TIR-FPR.
247 oss its interface with L-selectin to promote rebinding, thereby providing a mechanism for catch bonds
248 e transition to the unbound state and favors rebinding, thus explaining the long lifetime of the comp
249 cribed as a single-exponential process, with rebinding time constants of 29.4 +/- 1 and 9.3 +/- 1 ps,
250 large nonexponential geminate amplitude with rebinding time scales of approximately 10(-11)-10(-9) s
251 f mutagenesis on geminate and bimolecular O2 rebinding to 90 mutants at 27 different positions were u
252               We assign the fast phase of NO rebinding to a conformation of the ferric protein with a
253 d by reversible gyrase dissociation from and rebinding to a DNA segment, changing the supercoiling le
254 ansient diffusion through solution and rapid rebinding to a nearby, membrane-associated target lipid.
255 ay involve multiple rounds of cytosolic RAF1 rebinding to active RAS at the membrane.
256 M(-1) s(-1) in beta subunits, whereas ligand rebinding to alphaTrp(E7) subunits after photolysis is m
257                            Rapid bimolecular rebinding to an open alpha subunit conformation occurs i
258 reglucosylated rapidly and became capable of rebinding to calnexin.
259                 The ultrafast kinetics of CO rebinding to carbon monoxide oxidation activator protein
260 anical work produced during the breaking and rebinding to determine a free-energy difference, DeltaG,
261  a DNA scaffold increased the probability of rebinding to F-actin and enabled processive steps along
262 ay of the transient Cu(B)(1+)-CO complex and rebinding to heme a(3) rates, suggesting that no structu
263   Femtosecond to nanosecond dynamics of O(2) rebinding to human WT myoglobin and its mutants, V68F an
264 d excess of FK506 (to prevent rapamycin from rebinding to its cytosolic receptor FKBP-12).
265                     We report kinetics of CO rebinding to microperoxidase (MP) and 2-methylimidazole
266              After photodissociation, ligand rebinding to myoglobin exhibits complex kinetic patterns
267 dies of CO photodissociation and bimolecular rebinding to neuroglobin focusing on the ligand migratio
268 elease of the ADP-helicase from mRNA and its rebinding to Nup214.
269 phasic, resulting from inhibitor release and rebinding to PNP catalytic sites.
270               In the calcium-replete ER, ADP rebinding to post-ATP hydrolysis BiP-substrate complexes
271                  By comparing the rate of CO rebinding to protoheme in glycerol solution with and wit
272  is characterized by a single kinetic phase, rebinding to RmFixL* is characterized by two kinetic pha
273                                   Whereas CO rebinding to RmFixLN is characterized by a single kineti
274  Subsequent adenylylation of enzyme prevents rebinding to the adenylylated DNA intermediate comprisin
275 lucosylation of glycoproteins supports their rebinding to the carbohydrate-binding ER molecular chape
276                    Enthalpic barriers for O2 rebinding to the copper(I) center ( approximately 10 kJ
277 xin undergoes frequent dissociation from and rebinding to the DNA.
278 ereby inhibiting its protonation and slowing rebinding to the Fe.
279 h heme domain) show similar rates for ligand rebinding to the five-coordinate heme domain and the abs
280              In full-length sGC, CO geminate rebinding to the heme does not occur.
281  rate of microtubule association that drives rebinding to the microtubule after force-dependent motor
282 ted from the microtubule by ATP, followed by rebinding to the microtubule by the ADP-containing head.
283  all exposed NC facets-even without explicit rebinding to the NC surface-and we establish limitations
284 igen-stimulated oscillatory dissociation and rebinding to the plasma membrane with a time course that
285 there is a significant probability of ligand rebinding to the same or neighboring subunits within a t
286 sults, we propose a model in which rapid TCR rebinding to the same pMHC after chemical dissociation i
287            We show that inclusion of induced rebinding to the same pMHC in kinetic proofreading model
288 r "foot stomps," with one hand detaching and rebinding to the same site, and back-steps under suffici
289 aments and would be followed by cross-bridge rebinding to thin filaments.
290  originally thought to be associated with CO rebinding to two different partially folded states of cy
291 erized carbon monoxide photodissociation and rebinding to two forms of the heme domain of Bradyrhizob
292 d then cooled to 25 degreesC were capable of rebinding to, and of reactivating, the O2-evolution acti
293 pose a role for the on rate through multiple rebindings to the same TCR.
294                                           Mb rebinding was detected by direct electrocatalytic reduct
295                                           Mb rebinding was examined in Mb-free diluted human serum sp
296 e -7 cleavage site, and the dissociation and rebinding were enhanced when the M184V mutation was pres
297 ck" in the distal pocket, promoting internal rebinding, whereas the out conformation inhibits geminat
298 nsic reduction in selectivity with increased rebinding, which benefits inefficient reactions, rather
299 2+) from aqueous solution was studied during rebinding with the leached IIP particles as a function o
300 ethering and rolling, probably by increasing rebinding within a bond cluster.

 
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