User:Karsten Theis/turns
From Proteopedia
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</jmol>, we have a proline in position 3 and a cis-peptide between position 2 and 3. The cis-peptide has a shorter distance between alpha carbons (3.04 instead of 3.76 angstroms), making for a very tight turn. There is no hydrogen bond between residue 1 and 4 in this case. Beta turns involving a cis-peptide are classified as type VI. | </jmol>, we have a proline in position 3 and a cis-peptide between position 2 and 3. The cis-peptide has a shorter distance between alpha carbons (3.04 instead of 3.76 angstroms), making for a very tight turn. There is no hydrogen bond between residue 1 and 4 in this case. Beta turns involving a cis-peptide are classified as type VI. | ||
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| + | You can revisit <scene name='10/1072233/Alpha_2hmr/4'>myohemerythrin</scene> and <scene name='10/1072233/Agglutinin/3'>agglutinin protein</scene>and <scene name='10/1072233/Tim/3'>TIM barrel protein</scene>. Use the button below to highlight glycine (white) and proline (green) residues. | ||
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| + | <jmol> | ||
| + | <jmolButton> | ||
| + | <script>select gly.ca; | ||
| + | spacefill on; | ||
| + | color white; | ||
| + | select pro.ca; | ||
| + | spacefill on; | ||
| + | color green | ||
| + | </script> | ||
| + | <text>Glycine and Proline</text> | ||
| + | </jmolButton> | ||
| + | </jmol> | ||
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You can explore more turns at betaturn.com, which allows you to browse for turns of a specific type, and contains a lot of information and explanations. | You can explore more turns at betaturn.com, which allows you to browse for turns of a specific type, and contains a lot of information and explanations. | ||
Revision as of 21:36, 16 February 2025
A beta turn is a secondary structure element consisting of four consecutive amino acids (or three consecutive peptide planes). The geometry of turns correspond to a change in the direction of the polypeptide backbone, with a short distance between the first and fourth alpha carbon.
Concepts you can explore here
- A beta turn is a secondary structure element distinct from (but sometimes overlapping with) alpha helices and beta strands
- Beta turns consist of stretches of four amino acids making a sharp turn, with a short distance between the first and last alpha carbon
- Beta turns typically occur near the surface of globular proteins, often connecting helices and strands
- There are multiple types of beta turns, distinguished by the torsion angles of the second and third residue
- Glycine and proline occur relatively often in beta turns and play distinct special roles
See the discussion tab for learning and teaching notes.
Turns in 3D
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Further reading
- Turns in Proteins
- [betaturn.com] allows you to brows a protein database for turns of different types
References
- ↑ de Brevern AG. A Perspective on the (Rise and Fall of) Protein β-Turns. Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Oct 14;23(20):12314. PMID:36293166 doi:10.3390/ijms232012314
- ↑ Wilmot CM, Thornton JM. Analysis and prediction of the different types of beta-turn in proteins. J Mol Biol. 1988 Sep 5;203(1):221-32. PMID:3184187 doi:10.1016/0022-2836(88)90103-9
