Sandbox Reserved 1676

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Current revision (13:44, 19 April 2021) (edit) (undo)
 
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This protein has eight chains. In the <scene name='87/873238/Secondary_view/1'>secondary structure</scene>, each of the chains has eleven alpha helixes and nine beta-sheets. To help with the stability, some of the eight chains bind to the GOL. Within each of the chains, there are two catalytic amino acids within helix number three. In helix seven is where the last catalytic acid is. These helices and beta-sheets are very important to the structure of the protein because they represent the interactions between the polypeptides. If these interactions would be changed or removed, the whole structure would change. The function of B-Lactamase would completely change.
This protein has eight chains. In the <scene name='87/873238/Secondary_view/1'>secondary structure</scene>, each of the chains has eleven alpha helixes and nine beta-sheets. To help with the stability, some of the eight chains bind to the GOL. Within each of the chains, there are two catalytic amino acids within helix number three. In helix seven is where the last catalytic acid is. These helices and beta-sheets are very important to the structure of the protein because they represent the interactions between the polypeptides. If these interactions would be changed or removed, the whole structure would change. The function of B-Lactamase would completely change.
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The tertiary structure is a <scene name='87/873238/Space_filling/2'>space-filling structure</scene>. Inside this space-filling structure, you can see the ligand, ampicillin, as well as the hydrophobic(grey) and polar(amino acids). The tertiary structure, space-filling, allows us to view how large protein would actually appear 3-dimensionally. Inside this structure, you can spot the binding pocket where the protein would bind to the substrate. Since B-Lactamase appears to be very compact, we can assume it is very hard for solvents to pass through it or for anything to bind onto it anywhere besides the binding site.
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<scene name='87/873238/Space_filling/2'>Space-filling structure</scene>. Inside this space-filling structure, you can see the ligand, ampicillin, as well as the hydrophobic(grey) and polar(amino acids). The tertiary structure, space-filling, allows us to view how large protein would actually appear 3-dimensionally. Inside this structure, you can spot the binding pocket where the protein would bind to the substrate. Since B-Lactamase appears to be very compact, we can assume it is very hard for solvents to pass through it or for anything to bind onto it anywhere besides the binding site.
There is no quaternary structure. Because there are not multiple molecules of the protein. If they were more than 1 molecule or strand of protein a quarternary structure would exist.
There is no quaternary structure. Because there are not multiple molecules of the protein. If they were more than 1 molecule or strand of protein a quarternary structure would exist.

Current revision

This Sandbox is Reserved from 01/25/2021 through 04/30/2021 for use in Biochemistry taught by Bonnie Hall at Grand View University, Des Moines, USA. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1665 through Sandbox Reserved 1682.
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CTX-M-14 B-Lactamase

Caption for this structure

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References

[[1]] [[2]]

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