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Ligand depletion |
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In many experimental situations, you can assume that a very small fraction of the ligand binds to receptors (or to nonspecific sites). In these situations, you can also assume that the free concentration of ligand is approximately equal to the concentration you added. This assumption vastly simplifies the analysis of binding experiments, and the standard analysis methods depend on this assumption. In other situations, a large fraction of the ligand binds to the receptors (or binds nonspecifically). This means that the concentration of ligand free in the solution does not equal the concentration you added. The discrepancy is not the same in all tubes or at all times. The free ligand concentration is depleted by binding. Many investigators use this rule of thumb: If less than 10% of the ligand binds, don't worry about ligand depletion; if more than 10% of the ligand binds, you have three choices:
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