Knowledge (XXG)

Polyvalency (chemistry)

Source đź“ť

27: 164:
Wu, Albert M.; Wu, June H.; Liu, Jia-Hau; Singh, Tanuja; André, Sabine; Kaltner, Herbert; Gabius, Hans-Joachim (April 2004). "Effects of polyvalency of glycotopes and natural modifications of human blood group ABH/Lewis sugars at the Galbeta1-terminated core saccharides on the binding of domain-I of
30:
Fig. 1. Electron sharing in multivalent atomic binding. The dots and crosses represent the outer electrons of the two different species in each molecule. In ammonia (a), N is connected to three H atoms and is trivalent. In carbon tetrachloride (b), C is connected to four Cl atoms and is
277:
Davis, K. A.; et al. (1999). “Determination of CD4 antigen density on cells: Role of antibody valency, avidity, clones, and conjugation”. Cytometry Part A. 33 (2):197–205.
343: 301:
Hu, X.; et al. (2019) “Valency-Controlled Molecular Spherical Nucleic Acids with Tunable Biosensing Performances”. Anal. Chem. 91 (17): 11374–11379.
278: 106:) can form multiple bonds with one another by DNA hybridization to form hierarchical assemblies, some of which are highly crystalline in nature. 265:
Crothers, D.; Metzger, H. (1972). “The influence of polyvalency on the binding properties of antibodies”. Immunochemistry. 9 (3): 341–57.
253: 333: 20: 338: 313:
Macfarlane, R. J.; et al. (2011). "Nanoparticle Superlattice Engineering with DNA". Science. 334 (6053): 204–08.
289:
Jones, M. A.; et al. (2015) “Programmable materials and the nature of the DNA bond”. Science. 347 (6224): 840.
68: 64: 266: 213: 95: 80: 249: 182: 146: 83:" is used (Fig. 1). For both atoms and larger species, the number of bonds may be specified: 245: 221: 174: 136: 302: 217: 72: 314: 290: 327: 201: 26: 165:
recombinant tandem-repeat-type galectin-4 from rat gastrointestinal tract (G4-N)".
99: 60: 178: 202:"Polyvalency: Recent developments and new opportunities for chemical engineers" 36: 279:
doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0320(19981001)33:2<197::AID-CYTO14>3.0.CO;2-P
186: 150: 123:
Vance, David; Shah, Mrinal; Joshi, Amit; Kane, Ravi S. (15 October 2008).
56: 52: 98:
compared to their monovalent counterparts. Nanoparticles with multiple
225: 141: 124: 25: 76: 103: 16:
Property of chemical species that can form multiple bonds
94:
Species that have polyvalency usually show enhanced or
125:"Polyvalency: a promising strategy for drug design" 19:"Multivalent" redirects here. For other uses, see 8: 63:surface-functionalized with ligands, like 140: 91:species can form three bonds; and so on. 244:Cartmell, E.; Fowles, G. W. A. (1983). 115: 7: 344:Dimensionless numbers of chemistry 14: 303:doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b02614 267:doi: 10.1016/0019-2791(72)90097-3 102:strands on their surfaces (e.g., 129:Biotechnology and Bioengineering 246:Valency and Molecular Structure 87:species can form two bonds; a 1: 67:, that exhibit more than one 291:doi: 10.1126/science.1260901 179:10.1016/j.biochi.2004.03.007 55:and larger species, such as 21:Polyvalence (disambiguation) 315:doi:10.1126/science.1210493 360: 69:supramolecular interaction 59:, medical drugs, and even 18: 200:Kane, Ravi (2006-11-01). 65:spherical nucleic acids 32: 51:) is the property of 29: 71:. For the number of 334:Chemical properties 218:2006AIChE..52.3638K 96:cooperative binding 33: 226:10.1002/aic.11011 212:(11): 3638–3644. 142:10.1002/bit.22056 351: 339:Chemical bonding 318: 311: 305: 299: 293: 287: 281: 275: 269: 263: 257: 242: 236: 235: 233: 232: 197: 191: 190: 173:(4–5): 317–326. 161: 155: 154: 144: 120: 359: 358: 354: 353: 352: 350: 349: 348: 324: 323: 322: 321: 312: 308: 300: 296: 288: 284: 276: 272: 264: 260: 243: 239: 230: 228: 199: 198: 194: 163: 162: 158: 122: 121: 117: 112: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 357: 355: 347: 346: 341: 336: 326: 325: 320: 319: 306: 294: 282: 270: 258: 237: 192: 156: 135:(3): 429–434. 114: 113: 111: 108: 73:chemical bonds 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 356: 345: 342: 340: 337: 335: 332: 331: 329: 316: 310: 307: 304: 298: 295: 292: 286: 283: 280: 274: 271: 268: 262: 259: 255: 254:0-408-70809-3 251: 247: 241: 238: 227: 223: 219: 215: 211: 207: 206:AIChE Journal 203: 196: 193: 188: 184: 180: 176: 172: 168: 160: 157: 152: 148: 143: 138: 134: 130: 126: 119: 116: 109: 107: 105: 101: 97: 92: 90: 86: 82: 78: 74: 70: 66: 62: 61:nanoparticles 58: 54: 50: 46: 42: 38: 28: 22: 309: 297: 285: 273: 261: 240: 229:. Retrieved 209: 205: 195: 170: 166: 159: 132: 128: 118: 100:nucleic acid 93: 88: 84: 79:, the term " 49:multivalency 48: 44: 40: 34: 31:tetravalent. 248:(4th ed.). 45:polyvalence 41:polyvalency 328:Categories 231:2020-08-04 110:References 57:antibodies 167:Biochimie 89:trivalent 53:molecules 37:chemistry 187:15194236 151:18727104 85:divalent 214:Bibcode 81:valence 252:  185:  149:  77:atoms 250:ISBN 183:PMID 147:PMID 43:(or 222:doi 175:doi 137:doi 133:101 104:DNA 75:of 35:In 330:: 220:. 210:52 208:. 204:. 181:. 171:86 169:. 145:. 131:. 127:. 47:, 39:, 317:. 256:. 234:. 224:: 216:: 189:. 177:: 153:. 139:: 23:.

Index

Polyvalence (disambiguation)

chemistry
molecules
antibodies
nanoparticles
spherical nucleic acids
supramolecular interaction
chemical bonds
atoms
valence
cooperative binding
nucleic acid
DNA
"Polyvalency: a promising strategy for drug design"
doi
10.1002/bit.22056
PMID
18727104
doi
10.1016/j.biochi.2004.03.007
PMID
15194236
"Polyvalency: Recent developments and new opportunities for chemical engineers"
Bibcode
2006AIChE..52.3638K
doi
10.1002/aic.11011
Valency and Molecular Structure
ISBN

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑