Allosteric enzymes as biosensors for molecular diagnosis
- PMID: 14596934
- DOI: 10.1016/s0014-5793(03)01160-8
Allosteric enzymes as biosensors for molecular diagnosis
Abstract
Biosensors are hybrid analytical devices that amplify signals generated from the specific interaction between a receptor and the analyte, through a biochemical mechanism. Biosensors use tissues, whole cells, artificial membranes or cell components like proteins or nucleic acids as receptors, coupled to a physicochemical signal transducer. Allosteric enzymes exhibit a catalytic activity that is modulated by specific effectors, through binding to receptor sites that are distinct from the active site. Several enzymes, catalyzing easily measurable reactions, have been engineered to allosterically respond to specific ligands, being themselves the main constituent of new-generation biosensors. The molecular basis, robustness and application of allosteric enzymatic biosensing are revised here.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources