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<span style="border:none; margin:0; padding:0.3em; color:#000; font-style: italic;"><b>Because life has more than 2D</b>, Proteopedia helps to understand relationships between structure and function. <b>Proteopedia</b> is a free, collaborative 3D-encyclopedia of proteins & other molecules.</span>
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<div style="top:+0.2em; font-size:1.2em; padding:5px 5px 5px 10px; float:right;">'''''ISSN 2310-6301'''''</div>
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<span style="top:+0.2em; font-size:1.2em; padding-right:5px;float:right;">'''''ISSN 2310-6301'''''</span>
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<span style="border:none; margin:0; padding:0.3em; color:#000; font-style: italic; font-size: 1.4em;">
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<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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<p>[[Help:Contents#For_authors:_contributing_content|How to add content to Proteopedia]]</p>
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<p>[[Proteopedia:Video_Guide|Video Guides]]</p>
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<p>[[Who knows]] ...</p>
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<td style="padding: 10px;>
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<p>[[I3DC|About Interactive 3D Complements - '''I3DCs''']]</p>
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<p>[[Proteopedia:I3DC|List of I3DCs]]</p>
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<p>[[How to get an I3DC for your paper]]</p>
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<td style="padding: 10px;>
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<p>[[Teaching strategies using Proteopedia]]</p>
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<p>[[Teaching_Scenes%2C_Tutorials%2C_and_Educators%27_Pages|Examples of pages for teaching]]</p>
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<p>[[Help:Contents#For_authors:_contributing_content|How to add content to Proteopedia]]</p>
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<table width='100%' style="padding: 10px; background-color: #d7d8f9; font-size: 1.5em;"><tr>
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<td>[[Proteopedia:About|About]]</td>
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<td>[[Special:Contact|Contact]]</td>
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<td>[[Template:MainPageNews|Hot News]]</td>
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<td>[[Proteopedia:Table of Contents|Table of Contents]]</td>
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<td>[[Proteopedia:Structure Index|Structure Index]]</td>
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<td>[[Help:Contents|Help]]</td>
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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
The ribosome

by Wayne Decatur
The 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded for studies of the ribosome. The ribosome is the machine in your cells that accurately and efficiently decodes the genetic information stored in your genome and synthesizes the corresponding polypeptide chain one amino acid at a time in the process of translation. These structures are considered landmarks for the fact they showed clearly the major contributions to decoding and peptide bond synthesis come from RNA and not protein, as well as for the sheer size of the structures determined.

>>> Visit this page >>>

About this image
Geobacter nanowire structure surprise.

F Wang, Y Gu, JP O'Brien, SM Yi, SE Yalcin, V Srikanth, C Shen, D Vu, NL Ing, AI Hochbaum, EH Egelman, NS Malvankar. Cell 2019 doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2019.03.029
Bacteria living in anaerobic environments (no oxygen) need alternative electron acceptors in order to get energy from their food. An acceptor abundant in the earth's crust is red iron oxide ("rust"), which gets reduced to black iron oxide (magnetite). Many bacteria, such as Geobacter, get their metabolic energy by transferring electrons to acceptors that are multiple cell diameters distant, using protein nanowires. These were long thought to be pili. But when the structure of the nanowires was solved in 2019, to everyone's surprise, they turned out to be unprecedented linear polymers of multi-heme cytochromes. The hemes form an electrically conductive chain in the cores of these nanowires.

>>> Visit I3DC Interactive Visualizations >>>

About this image
Virus Capsid Geometry

The Capsid of a virus is its outer shell or "skin". Viruses have evolved intricate and elegant ways to assemble capsid protein chains into complete, usually spherical capsids, often with icosahedral symmetry. Pictured is an extremely simplified model of a capsid, where a single enlarged atom represents each of the 360 protein chains in the capsid of the Simian Virus 40 (SV40), a member of a group of cancer-causing viruses that has been extensively researched for decades.

>>> 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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