User:Karsten Theis/detailed views

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Some distances are crucial to function. Here is a picture of the <scene name='79/799553/Etransfer/1'>redox centers of XDH</scene> and the approximate distances between them. Electrons travel from MoCo via to two-iron-two-sulfur centers to FAD as the substrate bound near MoCo is oxidized and FAD is reduced. If the distances between electron carriers were to large, or had to cross solvent-exposed areas, this enzyme would not work.
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Some distances are crucial to function. Here is a picture of the <scene name='79/799553/Etransfer/2'>redox centers of XDH</scene> and the approximate distances between them. Electrons travel from MoCo via to two-iron-two-sulfur centers to FAD as the substrate bound near MoCo is oxidized and FAD is reduced. If the distances between electron carriers were too large, or had to cross solvent-exposed areas, this enzyme would not work.
==Surface view to show the shape of a binding pocket==
==Surface view to show the shape of a binding pocket==
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One aspect of the binding specificity of proteins is shape complementarity of a binding site with the ligand. Here is an example of the <scene name='79/799553/Active_site_with_alloxanthine/1'>binding pocket of xanthine dehydrogenase</scene>, which can accommodate various nucleobases (some as substrate, some as inhibitors). The structure was solved in the presence of a suicide substrate that first gets oxidized on one side of the molecule, then rebinds to the molecule rotated by 180 degrees. The natural substrate gets oxidized on both sides, but the inhibitor (through a swap of a nitrogen and carbon atom) can not be oxidized at the second site.
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One aspect of the binding specificity of proteins is shape complementarity of a binding site with the ligand. Here is an example of the <scene name='79/799553/Active_site_with_alloxanthine/2'>binding pocket of xanthine dehydrogenase</scene>, which can accommodate various nucleobases (some as substrate, some as inhibitors). The structure was solved in the presence of a suicide substrate that first gets oxidized on one side of the molecule, then rebinds to the molecule rotated by 180 degrees. The natural substrate gets oxidized on both sides, but the inhibitor (through a swap of a nitrogen and carbon atom) can not be oxidized at the second site.
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xanthine dehydrogenase 1jro

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Karsten Theis

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