lowaffinity
Lowaffinity is a term used to describe molecular interactions in which the binding between a ligand and its partner, such as a receptor, antigen, or substrate, is relatively weak. In practice, lowaffinity interactions are characterized by a high dissociation constant (Kd) and a rapid off-rate, resulting in short-lived complexes and low occupancy under physiological conditions. The concept contrasts with high-affinity interactions, which form more stable complexes.
Although weak, lowaffinity binding can be biologically meaningful, especially when dynamics and reversibility are important. In
In immunology, lowaffinity B-cell receptors and antibodies can participate in responses. Through affinity maturation, average affinity
In pharmacology and drug development, lowaffinity ligands may reduce target occupancy, minimize off-target effects, and allow
Measurement and interpretation: Kd, on-rate (kon), and off-rate (koff) describe affinity and kinetics; techniques include surface
Related terms include affinity, avidity, binding kinetics, and multivalent interactions.