Ann Taylor/HIV Protease

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==How HIV Protease works==
==How HIV Protease works==
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HIV protease is categorized as an Aspartate Protease. This means that <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Catalytic_asp/1'>aspartic acid side chains</scene> are required for its function. In HIV protease, one aspartic acid from each protein chain interact with the <scene name='31/315240/Saquinavir_cat_water/2'>water</scene> that cleaves the peptide bond.
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HIV protease is categorized as an Aspartate Protease. This means that <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Catalytic_asp/1'>aspartic acid side chains</scene> are required for its function. In HIV protease, one aspartic acid from each protein chain interacts with the <scene name='31/315240/Saquinavir_cat_water/2'>peptide chain</scene> to position it in a way that water can break the peptide bond.

Revision as of 16:39, 7 April 2022

Structure of HIV-1 Protease (PDB code 2nmz)

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References

  1. Wlodawer A, Miller M, Jaskolski M, Sathyanarayana BK, Baldwin E, Weber IT, Selk LM, Clawson L, Schneider J, Kent SB. Conserved folding in retroviral proteases: crystal structure of a synthetic HIV-1 protease. Science. 1989 Aug 11;245(4918):616-21. PMID:2548279
  2. Lapatto R, Blundell T, Hemmings A, Overington J, Wilderspin A, Wood S, Merson JR, Whittle PJ, Danley DE, Geoghegan KF, et al.. X-ray analysis of HIV-1 proteinase at 2.7 A resolution confirms structural homology among retroviral enzymes. Nature. 1989 Nov 16;342(6247):299-302. PMID:2682266 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/342299a0

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Ann Taylor

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