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| {{STRUCTURE_1lhz| PDB=1lhz | SCENE= }} | | {{STRUCTURE_1lhz| PDB=1lhz | SCENE= }} |
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- | '''Structure of a Human Bence-Jones Dimer Crystallized in U.S. Space Shuttle Mission STS-95: 293K'''
| + | ===Structure of a Human Bence-Jones Dimer Crystallized in U.S. Space Shuttle Mission STS-95: 293K=== |
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- | ==Overview==
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- | Crystals of a human (Sea) Bence-Jones dimer were produced in a capillary by vapor diffusion under microgravity conditions in the 9 day US Space Shuttle Mission STS-95. In comparison to ground-based experiments, nucleation was facile and spontaneous in space. Appearance of a very large (8 x 1.6 x 1.0 mm) crystal in a short time period is a strong endorsement for the use of microgravity to produce crystals sufficiently large for neutron diffraction studies. The Sea dimer crystallized in the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with a = 48.9 A, b = 85.2 A, and c = 114.0 A. The crystals grown in microgravity exhibited significantly lower mosaicities than those of ground-based crystals and the X-ray diffraction data had a lower overall B factor. Three-dimensional structures determined by X-ray analysis at two temperatures (100 and 293 K) were indistinguishable from those obtained from ground-based crystals. However, both the crystallographic R factor and the free R factor were slightly lower in the models derived from crystals produced in microgravity. The major difference between the two crystal growth systems is a lack of convection and sedimentation in a microgravity environment. This environment resulted in the growth of much larger, higher-quality crystals of the Sea Bence-Jones protein. Structurally, heretofore unrecognized grooves on the external surfaces of the Sea and other immunoglobulin-derived fragments are regular features and may offer supplementary binding regions for super antigens and other elongated ligands in the bloodstream and perivascular tissues.
| + | The line below this paragraph, {{ABSTRACT_PUBMED_12720277}}, adds the Publication Abstract to the page |
| + | (as it appears on PubMed at http://www.pubmed.gov), where 12720277 is the PubMed ID number. |
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| + | {{ABSTRACT_PUBMED_12720277}} |
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| ==About this Structure== | | ==About this Structure== |
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| [[Category: Induced fit]] | | [[Category: Induced fit]] |
| [[Category: Microgravity crystallization]] | | [[Category: Microgravity crystallization]] |
- | ''Page seeded by [http://oca.weizmann.ac.il/oca OCA ] on Fri May 2 23:56:22 2008'' | + | |
| + | ''Page seeded by [http://oca.weizmann.ac.il/oca OCA ] on Wed Jul 2 20:57:01 2008'' |
Revision as of 17:57, 2 July 2008
Template:STRUCTURE 1lhz
Structure of a Human Bence-Jones Dimer Crystallized in U.S. Space Shuttle Mission STS-95: 293K
Template:ABSTRACT PUBMED 12720277
About this Structure
Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.
Reference
Comparison of the three-dimensional structures of a human Bence-Jones dimer crystallized on Earth and aboard US Space Shuttle Mission STS-95., Terzyan SS, Bourne CR, Ramsland PA, Bourne PC, Edmundson AB, J Mol Recognit. 2003 Mar-Apr;16(2):83-90. PMID:12720277
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