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Molecular Playground/OmpG

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==Structural Features of OmpG==
==Structural Features of OmpG==
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OmpG is a 14-stranded beta-barrel and in contrast to most porins, appears to function as a monomer.[1] The central pore of OmpG is wider than other E. coli porins and it is speculated that it may form a non-specific channel for the passive transport of larger oligosaccharides.[1] OmpG adopts two conformations: open and closed. At neutral pH the porin displays an open conformation. However at a more acidic pH the closed conformation is adopted. This closed conformation is a result of OmpG's flexible extracellular loop 6, which folds across the channel blocking the pore opening. The rearrangement of loop 6 appears to be triggered by a pair of histidine residues, which repel one another at acidic pH, resulting in the breakage of neighbouring H-bonds and a lengthening of loop 6 from 10 to 17 residues[2,3]. <scene name='User:Christina_Chisholm/Sandbox_1/Greenwoselection_ompg/3'></scene>
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OmpG is a 14-stranded beta-barrel and in contrast to most porins, appears to function as a monomer.[1] The central pore of OmpG is wider than other E. coli porins and it is speculated that it may form a non-specific channel for the passive transport of larger oligosaccharides.[1] OmpG adopts two conformations: open and closed. At neutral pH the porin displays an open conformation. However at a more acidic pH the closed conformation is adopted. This closed conformation is a result of OmpG's flexible extracellular loop 6, which folds across the channel blocking the pore opening. The rearrangement of loop 6 appears to be triggered by a pair of histidine residues, which repel each another at acidic pH, resulting in the breakage of neighbouring H-bonds and a lengthening of loop 6 from 10 to 17 residues[2,3]. <scene name='User:Christina_Chisholm/Sandbox_1/Greenwoselection_ompg/3'></scene>
[[Image:OmpG Conformation.png|thumb|]]
[[Image:OmpG Conformation.png|thumb|]]
[2IWW]
[2IWW]
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outer_membrane_protein_G].
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outer_membrane_protein_G].
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The loop environment of OmpG carries a net negative charge. This highly negative character may be implicated in the gating behavior of OmpG. If we can gain a deeper understanding of OmpG gating, we could could use this knowledge to tune it for specific detection of target analytes.
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==Current OmpG Projects in the Chen Lab==
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Engineering loop 6 to detect large protein analytes
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Investigating the effect of loop charge on the gating behavior of OmpG
==Additional Resources==
==Additional Resources==

Revision as of 15:31, 6 December 2014

Outer Membrane Protein G

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Bib Yang, Christina Chisholm, Monifa Fahie, Michal Harel

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