The Receptor Concept: A Continuing Evolution
Mol. Interv. 2004 4: 326-336.
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It might not be too much of a stretch to sum up the Dark Ages of receptor biology by invoking Sidney Harris's famous cartoon of two scientists standing at the blackboard where, in the middle of a written mathematical proof, one scientist has written, "Then a miracle occurs." The meticulous research of Paul Ehrlich branded the beginnings of this research field, as we know it, with no small degree of sophistication, and one wonders what he would have accomplished with modern-day technology. Moving from concepts of selectivity and preferential distribution, other researchers demonstrated the concept of concentration-dependent antagonism. More modern analyses engendered the concepts of affinity, relative potency, radioligand binding, culminating in the contemporary study of signal transduction and molecular mechanisms of disease.