Molecular Playground/Human Serum Albumin

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Current revision (20:39, 8 December 2014) (edit) (undo)
 
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HSA exists as a monomer that is comprised mostly of alpha helices. Each of the <scene name='57/571397/Different_domains_v2/1'>three homologous helical domains</scene>
HSA exists as a monomer that is comprised mostly of alpha helices. Each of the <scene name='57/571397/Different_domains_v2/1'>three homologous helical domains</scene>
(<B><font color="purple">domain I</font></B>, <B><font color="orange">domain II</font></B>, <B><font color="cyan">domain III</font></B>)
(<B><font color="purple">domain I</font></B>, <B><font color="orange">domain II</font></B>, <B><font color="cyan">domain III</font></B>)
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are further divided into subdomains A and B (A=darker shade, B=lighter shade), which form several hydrophobic pockets throughout the molecule. This multidomain structure of HSA allow it to bind many different classes of ligands at multiple sites.
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is further divided into subdomains A and B (A=darker shade, B=lighter shade), which then form several hydrophobic pockets throughout the molecule. This multidomain structure of HSA allows it to bind many different classes of ligands at multiple sites.
== Function ==
== Function ==

Current revision

HUMAN SERUM ALBUMIN (HSA)

Human serum albumin (PDB code 4iw1)

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Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Mahalia Serrano, Michal Harel

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