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<div style="top:+0.2em; font-size:1.2em; padding:5px 5px 5px 10px; float:right;">'''''ISSN 2310-6301'''''</div>
<div style="top:+0.2em; font-size:1.2em; padding:5px 5px 5px 10px; float:right;">'''''ISSN 2310-6301'''''</div>
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<b>As life is more than 2D</b>, Proteopedia helps to bridge the gap between 3D structure & function of biomacromolecules
<b>As life is more than 2D</b>, Proteopedia helps to bridge the gap between 3D structure & function of biomacromolecules
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<span style="border:none; margin:0; padding:0.3em; color:#000; font-style: italic; font-size: 1.1em;max-width:80%;display:block;">
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<b>Proteopedia</b> presents this information in a user-friendly way as a '''collaborative & free 3D-encyclopedia of proteins & other biomolecules.'''
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<th style="padding: 10px;background-color: #33ff7b">Selected Pages</th>
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<th style="padding: 10px;background-color: #33ff7b">Selected Research Pages</th>
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<th style="padding: 10px;background-color: #dae4d9">Art on Science</th>
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<th style="padding: 10px;background-color: #f1b840">In Journals</th>
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<th style="padding: 10px;background-color: #f1b840">Journals</th>
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<th style="padding: 10px;background-color: #79baff">Education</th>
<th style="padding: 10px;background-color: #79baff">Education</th>
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<td style="padding: 5px;"> {{Proteopedia:Featured SEL/{{#expr: {{#time:U}} mod {{Proteopedia:Number of SEL articles}}}}}}</td>
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<p>[[Proteopedia:Video_Guide|Video Guides]]</p>
<p>[[Proteopedia:Video_Guide|Video Guides]]</p>
<p>[[Who knows]] ...</p>
<p>[[Who knows]] ...</p>
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<p>[[:Category:PDB Art|List of Art on Science pages]]</p>
 
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<td>[[Proteopedia:About|About]]</td>
<td>[[Proteopedia:About|About]]</td>
<td>[[Special:Contact|Contact]]</td>
<td>[[Special:Contact|Contact]]</td>
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<td>[[Template:MainPageNews|Hot News]]</td>
<td>[[Proteopedia:Table of Contents|Table of Contents]]</td>
<td>[[Proteopedia:Table of Contents|Table of Contents]]</td>
<td>[[Proteopedia:Structure Index|Structure Index]]</td>
<td>[[Proteopedia:Structure Index|Structure Index]]</td>

Current revision

ISSN 2310-6301

As life is more than 2D, Proteopedia helps to bridge the gap between 3D structure & function of biomacromolecules

Proteopedia presents this information in a user-friendly way as a collaborative & free 3D-encyclopedia of proteins & other biomolecules.


Selected Research Pages In Journals Education
About this image
Bacteria float with nano-balloons.

ST Huber, D Terwiel, WH Evers, D Maresca, AJ Jakobi. Preprint 2022 doi: 10.1101/2022.05.08.489936
Many kinds of bacteria and archaea control their buoyancy to move to optimal positions in liquid environments. They do this by making nano-compartments called "gas vesicles", long "pipes" with closed ends filled with gases. In 2022, gas vesicle structure was solved, revealing self-assembling thin-walled cylinders of remarkable strength with gas-permeable pores and water-repelling (hydrophobic) interiors. Building on this structural knowledge, gas vesicles are being engineered to serve as biosensors that report via ultrasound.

>>> Visit I3DC Interactive Visualizations >>>

About this image
Geobacter pili: surprising function.

Y Gu, V Srikanth, AI Salazar-Morales, R Jain, JP O'Brien, SM Yi, RK Soni, FA Samatey, SE Yalcin, NS Malvankar. Nature 2021 doi: 10.1038/s41586-021-03857-w
Geobacter pili were long thought to be electrically conductive protein nanowires composed of PilA-N. Nanowires are crucial to the energy metabolism of bacteria flourishing in oxygen-deprived environments. To everyone's surprise, in 2019, the long-studied nanowires were found to be linear polymers of multi-heme cytochromes, not pili. The first cryo-EM structure of pili (2021) reveals a filament made of dimers of PilA-N and PilA-C, shown. Electrical conductivity of pili is much lower than that of cytochrome nanowires. Evidence suggests that PilA-NC filaments are periplasmic pseudopili crucial for exporting cytochrome nanowires onto the cell surface, rather than the pili serving as nanowires themselves.

>>> Visit I3DC Interactive Visualizations >>>

About this image
You Are What You Eat!

Above is an integral membrane protein that takes up, into your intestinal cells, orally consumed peptide nutrients and drugs. Its lumen-face (top) opens and binds peptide or drug (small solid object in the center), then closes, while its cytoplasmic face (bottom) opens to release its cargo into the intestinal cell, which passes it on to the blood circulation.

>>> See more animations and explanation >>>

How to add content to Proteopedia

Video Guides

Who knows ...

About Interactive 3D Complements - I3DCs

List of I3DCs

How to get an I3DC for your paper

Teaching strategies using Proteopedia

Examples of pages for teaching

How to add content to Proteopedia

About Contact Hot News Table of Contents Structure Index Help

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Joel L. Sussman, Jaime Prilusky

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