Equilibrium dissociation constant

The equilibrium dissociation constant, or KD, refers to the concentration of a ligand that occupies 50% of an available population of receptors in the absence of any other competing ligand. The KD can be obtained from a binding curve for the interaction of the ligand with the receptor of interest. The higher the binding affinity, the lower the KD value. An in-depth discussion of the parameters contributing to the value for KD may be found under the entry for affinity.

A ligand will have different KD values for different proteins, with the lowest KD usually being for its “target” protein. As a result, low concentrations or doses of a drug will show selectivity for binding to its target protein, but if concentrations of free drug in the body increase (perhaps as a result of increasing the dose, or competition for plasma protein binding, or reducing clearance by inhibiting CYP enzymes) then the drug can start to bind to a significant proportion of one or more alternative proteins, as well as to a greater proportion of the target proteins. This may result in both on and off target side effects.

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An ABC of PK/PD Copyright © 2023 by Dr. Andrew Holt is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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