User:Karl Oberholser
From Proteopedia
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*[[Complex III of Electron Transport Chain]] - After illustration of the structures and relative positions of the active peptides, the reactions of the Q cycle are illustrated and explained. | *[[Complex III of Electron Transport Chain]] - After illustration of the structures and relative positions of the active peptides, the reactions of the Q cycle are illustrated and explained. | ||
*[[Syn_and_anti_nucleosides]] - Illustrates the structural difference between the syn and anti configurations of nucleosides and the steric hindrance that is present in the syn configuration of pyrimidine nucleosides. | *[[Syn_and_anti_nucleosides]] - Illustrates the structural difference between the syn and anti configurations of nucleosides and the steric hindrance that is present in the syn configuration of pyrimidine nucleosides. | ||
| + | *[[Archaeal_Histones]] - Illustrates the structural features of two histones and the dimer of one of them. | ||
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Revision as of 16:49, 26 January 2010
Contents |
Karl Oberholser
Professor of Chemistry, Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, Messiah College, Grantham, PA, USA
I used HyperChem in my first venture in biomolecular visualization and computation. I eventually made some tutorials in which information was passed between HyperChem and Toolbook. When I became aware of Chime, I focused most of my work on protein structure and function and used Protein Explorer and PiPEs as they became available. When MolSlides became a feature of PE, I developed an assignment for biochemistry students to make MolSlides of a protein of their choice. In the early years of this work I received a variety of internal grants from Messiah College, and in more recent years I have been receiving release time from teaching. Realizing that Chime was on its death bed I got serious about learning Jmol during the Summer '07 , and during my Fall '07 sabbatical I ported most of the PiPEs to Jmol and converted the last of the HyperChem scripts to Jmol scripts. For most of this work I used α and β versions of Jmol Tutorial-Authoring Template being made by Eric Martz. My first exposure to Proteopedia was mentoring Emily Forschler as she developed Photosystem II.
Proteopedia Pages
- User:Karl Oberholser/Sandbox 1 - sandbox for my development work
- Fibroins
- Alpha-helical coiled-coil
- Class of globular proteins
- Myoglobin
- User:Karl_Oberholser/Ramachandran_Plots
- Karl_oberholser/PPDK_large - Large frame of a movie of the mechanism of pyruvate phosphate dikinase. The original page with a smaller movie frame and a description of the mechanism is here.
- User:Karl_Oberholser/Phosphoenolpyruvate:Sugar_Phosphotransferase - Large frame of a movie of the mechanism of Enzyme I of the Phosphoenolpyruvate:Sugar Phosphotransferase System. The original page with a smaller movie frame and a description of the system and mechanism is here.
- Complex III of Electron Transport Chain - After illustration of the structures and relative positions of the active peptides, the reactions of the Q cycle are illustrated and explained.
- Syn_and_anti_nucleosides - Illustrates the structural difference between the syn and anti configurations of nucleosides and the steric hindrance that is present in the syn configuration of pyrimidine nucleosides.
- Archaeal_Histones - Illustrates the structural features of two histones and the dimer of one of them.
Other structures and tutorials available in Jmol
- Klotho Biochemicals in Jmol - A searchable list of common biochemicals whose structures can be displayed conveniently in Jmol.
- Collagen
- Acetylcholinesterase
- Carbohydrates - Series of tutorials that focus on aspects of the 3D structure of mono-, di-, and polysaccharides that are not easily illustrated with 2D figures in text books.
