This old version of Proteopedia is provided for student assignments while the new version is undergoing repairs. Content and edits done in this old version of Proteopedia after March 1, 2026 will eventually be lost when it is retired in about June of 2026.
Apply for new accounts at the new Proteopedia. Your logins will work in both the old and new versions.
Introduction to protein structure
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
| Line 95: | Line 95: | ||
===Turns and loops=== | ===Turns and loops=== | ||
| - | Secondary structures are often connected by turns and loops, such as:UL> | + | Secondary structures are often connected by turns and loops, such as:<UL> |
| - | <LI>'''<scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Secondary_structure_betaturn/1'>Beta Turns</scene>''' - originally defined by the one hydrogen bond common to all (an i, i+3 hydrogen bond) but some modern descriptions do not require a hydrogen bond | + | <LI>'''<scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Secondary_structure_betaturn/1'>Beta Turns</scene>''' - originally defined by the one hydrogen bond common to all (an i, i+3 hydrogen bond) but some modern descriptions do not require a hydrogen bond. |
| - | + | ||
<LI>'''Alpha turns''' - the simplest of all motifs and is characterised by one (i, i+4) hydrogen bond. It is found as part of the hydrogen bonding network of alpha helices as well as occurring on its own. | <LI>'''Alpha turns''' - the simplest of all motifs and is characterised by one (i, i+4) hydrogen bond. It is found as part of the hydrogen bonding network of alpha helices as well as occurring on its own. | ||
<LI>'''<scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Secondary_structure_paperclip/1'>Paperclip/Schellman Motifs</scene>''' - a common motif found at the C-termini of alpha helices which is essentially a reverse turn that breaks the alpha helix out of its cycle. It is characterised by the presence of a left handed residue and two hydrogen bonds: an i, i+3 bond and an i, i+5 bond. | <LI>'''<scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Secondary_structure_paperclip/1'>Paperclip/Schellman Motifs</scene>''' - a common motif found at the C-termini of alpha helices which is essentially a reverse turn that breaks the alpha helix out of its cycle. It is characterised by the presence of a left handed residue and two hydrogen bonds: an i, i+3 bond and an i, i+5 bond. | ||
| - | + | ||
</UL> | </UL> | ||
| - | <br> | ||
| - | <br> | ||
| - | <br> | ||
| - | {{Clear}} | ||
==Motifs In Proteins== | ==Motifs In Proteins== | ||
| - | A motif is a super-secondary structure; it describes a set of secondary structures that plays a functional or structural role in a protein. The term is also used to describe a conserved amino acid sequence that characterizes a biochemical function. An example of this is the ' | + | A motif is a super-secondary structure; it describes a set of secondary structures that plays a functional or structural role in a protein. The term is also used to describe a conserved amino acid sequence that characterizes a biochemical function. An example of this is the <scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Zinc_finger_highlight/1'>zinc finger motif</scene> which is readily identified from the following consensus sequence pattern (where "X" represents ''any'' amino acid):<br/> |
'''Cys''' - X<sub>(2-4)</sub> - '''Cys''' - X<sub>(3)</sub> - Phe - X<sub>(5)</sub> - Leu - X<sub>(2)</sub> - '''His''' - X<sub>(3)</sub> - '''His''' <br/> | '''Cys''' - X<sub>(2-4)</sub> - '''Cys''' - X<sub>(3)</sub> - Phe - X<sub>(5)</sub> - Leu - X<sub>(2)</sub> - '''His''' - X<sub>(3)</sub> - '''His''' <br/> | ||
<br | <br | ||
| - | The example structure shown | + | The example structure shown is that of Zif268 protein-DNA complex from Mus musculus (PDB entry 1AAY). In this example (a C2H2 class zinc finger) the conserved <scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Zinc_finger_cysteine/1'>cysteine</scene> and <scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Zinc_finger_histidine/2'>histidine</scene> residues form ligands to a <scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Zinc_finger_zn/1'>zinc ion</scene> whose coordination is essential to stabilise the tertiary fold of the protein. The fold is important because it helps orientate the <scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Zinc_finger_recognition/1'>recognition helices</scene> to bind to the <scene name='User:James_D_Watson/Structural_Templates/Zinc_finger_major_groove/1'>major groove of the DNA</scene>. |
{{Clear}} | {{Clear}} | ||
Revision as of 17:23, 17 January 2014
Levels of Protein Structure
| |||||||||||
Content Donators
Created with content from Structural Templates written by Alexander Berchansky, [[User:James D Watson|James D Watson], Eran Hodis
Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)
Ann Taylor, Joel L. Sussman, Alexander Berchansky, Eric Martz, Israel Hanukoglu, Jaime Prilusky, Nick Kenworthy

