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Receptor modulator

A receptor modulator, or receptor ligand, is a general term for a substance, endogenous or exogenous, that binds to and regulates the activity of chemical receptors. They are ligands that can act on different parts of receptors and regulate activity in a positive, negative, or neutral direction with varying degrees of efficacy. Categories of these modulators include receptor agonists and receptor antagonists, as well as receptor partial agonists, inverse agonists, orthosteric modulators, and allosteric modulators, Examples of receptor modulators in modern medicine include CFTR modulators, selective androgen receptor modulators (SARMs), and muscarinic ACh receptor modulators.

Metrics Summary

Total Publications
Lifetime
4,906
Prior Five Years
998
Total Citations
Lifetime
97,339
Prior Five Years
7,867
Total Scholars
Lifetime
12,689
Prior Five Years
9,854

Institutional Rankings

Global (Worldwide)
Academic Institutions
Lifetime
Academic Institutions
Prior Five Years
Non-academic Institutions
Lifetime
#1
France
#1
United States
#1
United States
#2
United States
#2
United States
#2
United States
#3
Canada
#3
Japan
#3
United States
#4
Germany
#4
Japan
#4
Spain
#5
United States
#5
Japan
#5
United States
#6
United States
#6
Japan
#6
United States
#7
United States
#7
Germany
#7
United States
#8
United States
#8
France
#8
United States
#9
United States
#9
Canada
#9
#10
Belgium
#10
United Kingdom
#10
United States
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National Institutional Rankings

Publications and Citation History

Publications based on Disciplines

Scholars based on Disciplines

Publications based on Fields

Scholars based on Fields

Highly Ranked Scholars™

Lifetime
Prior Five Years

Highly Cited Publications

Lifetime