broadspecificity
Broadspecificity is a term used to describe the property of a molecule, enzyme, receptor, or biological system to interact with a relatively wide range of substrates, ligands, or targets. It stands in contrast to high specificity, where interactions are restricted to a small set of substrates or targets. The phrase appears in discussions across biochemistry, pharmacology, and immunology, often as an informal descriptor rather than a formal category in nomenclature.
In enzymes and proteins, broadspecificity can arise from structural features such as flexible active sites or
Measuring broadspecificity typically involves substrate scope profiling, where an entity is tested against a panel of
Critically, broadspecificity is not universally codified as a strict scientific category. Its usage often depends on