Highlighted Proteins of Lyme Disease

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<h3>Structure of OspC</h3>
<h3>Structure of OspC</h3>
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The <scene name='Studio:G4SecL04'>OspC</scene> three-dimensional model presented to the right is the <i>B. burgdorferi</i> B31 strain (residues 38-201) - also known as the oMG A strain. This is one of the four invasive oMGs that are responsible for systematic Lyme disease in mammalian hosts. In crystal structure, OspC exists as a dimer that coordinates a divalent ion, modeled here as magnesium. Each OspC subunit is predominantly helical, consisting of five parallel
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The <scene name='Studio:G4SecL04/Dimer_with_mg/1'>OspC</scene> three-dimensional model presented to the right is the <i>B. burgdorferi</i> B31 strain (residues 38-201) - also known as the oMG A strain. This is one of the four invasive oMGs that are responsible for systematic Lyme disease in mammalian hosts. In crystal structure, OspC exists as a dimer that coordinates a divalent ion, modeled here as magnesium. Each OspC subunit is predominantly helical, consisting of five parallel
<scene name='Studio:G4SecL04/Helix_blue_in_ribbon/1'> α-helices </scene>
<scene name='Studio:G4SecL04/Helix_blue_in_ribbon/1'> α-helices </scene>
, two short, antiparallel
, two short, antiparallel

Revision as of 23:52, 31 March 2014

PDB ID 1ggq

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Proteopedia Page Authors

Safa Abdelhakim, Frank J. Albergo, Irene Chen, Olivia Cheng, Rachel Cirineo, Jenny Kim Kim, Alexandros Konstantinidis, Cara Lin, Stephanie Maung, Christopher Morales, Andrea Mullen, Niamh B. O'Hara, Marvin H. O'Neal III, Philip J. Pipitone, Kimberly Slade, Christopher Smilios, Raymond Suhandynata, Khine Tun, Tanya Turkewitz, Ying Zhao, La Zhong, Jonathan Manit Wyrick.

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