Sandbox Reserved 955

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'''HIV 1 protease structure'''
'''HIV 1 protease structure'''
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HIV-1 protease is a dimer of identical polypeptide chains : it's composed of two symmetrically related subunits, each consisting of 99 amino acid residues. Its structure is composed of A,B chains,<scene name='60/604474/Helix/1'>two helix</scene> (one in each subunit)and <scene name='60/604474/Sheets/2'>bêta sheets</scene>.The subunits come together in such as way as to form a tunnel where they meet and in the inside of which is located the active site of the protease. The active site consists of two <scene name='60/604474/Catalytic/5'>Asp-Thr-Gly</scene> conserved sequences, making it a member of the aspartyl protease family. The two Asp's are essential catalytic residues either interact with the incoming water or protonate the carbonyl to make the carbon more electrophilic for the incoming water. The two flexible flaps on the top of the tunnel move to allow proteins to enter the tunnel. The flaps undergo a dramatic movement, shifting from an open to a closed conformation to bind the target in an appropriate conformation for cleavage. <ref>http://proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/HIV-1_protease</ref>
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HIV-1 protease is a dimer of identical polypeptide chains : it's composed of two symmetrically related subunits, each consisting of 99 amino acid residues. Its structure is composed of A,B chains,<scene name='60/604474/Helix/1'>two helix</scene> (one in each subunit)and <scene name='60/604474/Sheets/2'>16 bêta sheets</scene>(8 in each subunits).The subunits come together in such as way as to form a tunnel where they meet and in the inside of which is located the active site of the protease. The active site consists of two <scene name='60/604474/Catalytic/5'>Asp-Thr-Gly</scene> conserved sequences, making it a member of the aspartyl protease family. The two Asp's are essential catalytic residues either interact with the incoming water or protonate the carbonyl to make the carbon more electrophilic for the incoming water. The two flexible flaps on the top of the tunnel move to allow proteins to enter the tunnel. The flaps undergo a dramatic movement, shifting from an open to a closed conformation to bind the target in an appropriate conformation for cleavage. <ref>http://proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/HIV-1_protease</ref>
'''Binding site'''
'''Binding site'''

Revision as of 16:40, 8 January 2015

This Sandbox is Reserved from 15/11/2014, through 15/05/2015 for use in the course "Biomolecule" taught by Bruno Kieffer at the Strasbourg University. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 951 through Sandbox Reserved 975.
To get started:
  • Click the edit this page tab at the top. Save the page after each step, then edit it again.
  • Click the 3D button (when editing, above the wikitext box) to insert Jmol.
  • show the Scene authoring tools, create a molecular scene, and save it. Copy the green link into the page.
  • Add a description of your scene. Use the buttons above the wikitext box for bold, italics, links, headlines, etc.

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References

  1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HIV-1_protease
  2. http://biology.kenyon.edu/BMB/Jmol2008/2uxz/index.html#Inhibitor
  3. http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/explore/explore.do?structureId=7hvp
  4. http://proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/HIV-1_protease
  5. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC55048/pdf/pnas01047-0128.pdf
  6. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC55048/pdf/pnas01047-0128.pdf
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