Talk:Functional selectivity

Latest comment: 8 years ago by PaulTanenbaum in topic The lead is way weak

Untitled edit

"and that this characteristic will be consistent with all effector systems coupled to that receptor" Can you point to a published source for the "dogma" that this is part of the definition of agonists and antagonists? --JWSchmidt 17:13, 3 October 2005 (UTC)Reply

We need a Pluto Talk edit

Agonists, inverse agonists, antagonists, functional selectivity. There are too many variations in individual definitions of all of these. I often hear inverse agonists being described as antagonists by knowledgable people in pharmacology, because when they were educated, there was nothing other than the on / off dogma associated with the terms. The problem in clarification extends too to binding sites of receptors. There should be a difference in name between agonists which work at the same binding site of a receptor and those which do not. I hereby motion that we raise this issue, whether it be here on wikipedia or in a conference to discuss this issue so that the confusion does not continue into the future.--Carlwfbird 05:12, 26 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

The lead is way weak edit

Somebody wants to understand what selectivity means in biochemistry, resorts to Wikipedia, and is treated to this introductory passage:

"Functional selectivity (or 'agonist trafficking', 'biased agonism', 'ligand bias', and 'differential engagement' ) is the ligand-dependent selectivity..."

Hint: circular definitions are a bad thing. I'd fix this lead myself if I weren't one of the people resorting to Wikipedia to understand what selectivity means in biochemistry.—PaulTanenbaum (talk) 20:22, 1 September 2015 (UTC)Reply