23.6 Intermolecular Interactions
323
underset t right arrow normal infinity of limit upper Q left parenthesis t right parenthesis equals 0 period lim
t→∞Q(t) = 0 .
(23.13)
Problem. Derive the memory function for the system described by the reactions
(23.9). Hint: Use Laplace transforms.
Specificity
From the above considerations it follows that specificity of interaction is mainly
influenced by geometry (due to hard-body exclusion), the pattern of complementary
arrangements of HB-donors and HB-acceptors (for which an excellent example is the
base-pairing in DNA and RNA (Figs. 15.3 and 15.5) and the pattern of complementary
arrangements of dehydrons and apolar residues on the two associating partners). 27
Thus, specificity of interaction (synonymous with “molecular recognition”) is a
kind of pattern recognition (cf. Sect. 13.1), germane to sequence matching. Clearly,
the more features that are included in the matching problem, the more discriminating
the interaction will be.
Nonspecific Interactions
Most biological interactions show no discontinuity of affinity with some parameter
characterizing the identity of one of the binding partners, or their joint identity,
although the relation may be nonlinear. Hence in most cases the difference between
specific and nonspecific interactions is quantitative, not qualitative. Even nucleotides
can pair with the wrong bases, albeit with much smaller affinity. 28 In many cases,
such as the association of transcription factors with promoter sites, weak nonspecific
binding to any DNA sequence allows early association of the protein with the nucleic
acid, whereupon the search for the promoter sequence becomes a random walk in one
dimension rather than three, which enormously accelerates the finding process. 29 It
should be emphasized that nonspecific binding is an essential precursor to specific
binding. The scheme (23.9) applies, in which case the difference in states 1 and 2
might merely be one of orientation.
Coöperative Binding
Consider again reaction (23.6) with A representing a ligand binding to an unoccupied
site on a receptor (B). Suppose that the ligand-receptor complex C has changed prop-
erties that allow it to undergo further, previously inaccessible reactions (e.g., binding
to a DNA promoter sequence). The rôle of A is to switch B from one of its stable
conformational states to another. The approximate equality of the intramolecular,
molecule–solvent and A–B binding energies is an essential feature of such biologi-
cal switching reactions. An equilibrium binding constantupper K 0K0 is defined according to
the law of mass action (23.7). If there are nn independent binding sites per receptor,
conservation of mass dictates that b equals n b 0 minus cb = nb0 −c, where b 0b0 is the total concentration
27 See Ramsden (2000).
28 See, e.g., Kornyshev and Leikin (2001).
29 E.g. Ramsden and Dreier (1996); see Ramsden and Grätzel (1986) for a nonbiological example
of the effect of dimensional reduction from 3 to 2.