alloszterikus
Alloszterikus refers to regulation of a protein’s activity through binding at a site separate from the primary active site. The term derives from Greek allos ‘other’ and stereos ‘shape’, indicating a change in conformation induced by effector molecules. Alloszterikus regulation is common in enzymes and receptors and often involves cooperativity among subunits.
Alloszterikus proteins typically have at least two kinds of binding sites: the orthosteric (active) site and
Examples include hemoglobin, where allosteric effectors shift oxygen affinity, and metabolic enzymes such as aspartate transcarbamoylase,
Understanding alloszterikus is essential for drug design, systems biology, and the study of metabolic regulation, signaling