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3B7F is a currently unknown protein in terms of its function. Based on current structural analysis, it consists of one unique chain with a mass of 45.04 kDa and an atom count of 3,216. Based on previous studies, 3B7F is assumed to be a glycosyl hydrolase, however, the function is still not entirely known.[1] Through the following procedures and data collection, the goal of this research was to analyze the sequence and structure of 3B7F in order to better understand its enzymatic function.
3B7F is a currently unknown protein in terms of its function. Based on current structural analysis, it consists of one unique chain with a mass of 45.04 kDa and an atom count of 3,216. Based on previous studies, 3B7F is assumed to be a glycosyl hydrolase, however, the function is still not entirely known.[1] Through the following procedures and data collection, the goal of this research was to analyze the sequence and structure of 3B7F in order to better understand its enzymatic function.
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<StructureSection load='3B7F' size='400' side='right' caption='Structure of 3B7F' scene=''>
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'''Research Question:''' What is the function of the 3B7F protein, and how can this be determined through both computational and wet lab techniques?
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== Methods ==
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'''Relevance:''' The goal of this research is to determine the function of the 3BF7 protein in order to evaluate whether it can degrade xyloglucan or other types of carbohydrates and glycoconjugates in plants. Knowing this will allow future researchers to be able to better understand xyloglucan/carbohydrate glycoconjugate degradation in plants, and allow for known pathways to be expanded upon. Through this experimentation, we can also learn more about the ways in which both computational bioinformatics and wet lab techniques can aid in determining the function of a protein with a known structure.
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SPRITE:
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'''Hypothesis:''' 3B7F is a xyloglucanase, a type of glycosyl hydrolase that acts to degrade xyloglucan in plant cell walls. It presents optimal activity in fairly acidic conditions and demonstrates potentially satisfactory binding with PNP phosphate and lysine p nitroanilide.
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Enter the PBD ID for the protein of interest and exclude 2-residue hits. Once the search is complete, browse "List of Hits" results obtained. View the "Full details" result alignments. It is also possible to view the alignment between the protein of interest and the matched protein. View hits by each side of protein by viewing "Arranged by sites" function. Review alignments with an RMSD below 2.0 Angstroms and determine whether results are consistent with established function of the protein. Capture images of alignments that match proteins of interest the best and record RMSD values.
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<StructureSection load='3B7F' size='400' side='right' caption='Structure of 3B7F' scene=''>
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Chimera:
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== Methods ==
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Enter PBD ID of protein of interest and click fetch in order to show the structure of the protein. Using the results from SPRITE, load the protein of known function into Chimera using its PBD ID. Hide everything but the subunit of interest, and then align the active site motif (type in "match... followed by any atoms of interest). An RMSD value will be shown, and use that to determine the quality of alignment (anything below 2.0 Angstroms is considered high quality). To better visualize the alignment, delete "match" and replace it with "sel". Make it so that the structures align in a similar way that they did on SPRITE. Name and save the file for future use.
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'''SPRITE:
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'''
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The PBD ID for the protein of interest (3B7F) was entered and 2-residue hits excluded. Once the search was complete, "List of Hits" results were obtained. "Full details" result alignments also analyzed. Hits by each side of protein viewed by clicking "Arranged by sites" function. Alignments with an RMSD below 2.0 Angstroms were reviewed.
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Dali:
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'''Chimera:
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'''
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PBD ID of protein of interest entered and “fetch” was selected in order to show the structure of the protein. Based on the results from SPRITE, the protein of known function was loaded into Chimera using its PBD ID. Everything but the subunit of interest was hidden, and then the active site motif was aligned. The RMSD value was shown and used to determine the quality of alignment (anything below 2.0 Angstroms was considered high quality). To better visualize the alignment, "match" was deleted and replaced with "sel".
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Open the website and click on PDB search lab, enter the four-letter PDB of the assigned protein (3B7F). Next, submit the structure with the chain identifier (never use one with DNA, pick one representing the sequence the group is interested in). Enter a meaningful description in the job name field, enter email address, submit the job and wait for a link to be emailed. Once the link is emailed, download the results.
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'''Dali:
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'''
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PDB search tab was selected, and the four-letter PDB of the assigned protein (3B7F) was entered. The structure with the chain identifier was submitted. The job was viewed after completion.
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BLAST:
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'''BLAST:
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'''
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The PDB ID was searched for in the RCSB webpage. "FASTA sequence” was selected and the protein sequence was copied into the NCBI BLAST search page. Proteins similar to the query protein were identified based on sequence.
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Go to RCSB webpage and search for the protein by PDB ID, explore the page for the protein. Select "FASTA sequence: and look at the protein sequence and copy it. Go into the NCBI BLAST search page and paste the protein sequence into the sequence field. Using the sequence that shows up, try and identify proteins similar to the query protein.
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'''InterPro:
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'''
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An InterPro search was performed for the sequence of 3B7F. Protein superfamily identification and domains were reviewed. Related proteins in the domain organization were identified. The structures were also analyzed.
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InterPro:
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'''SwissDock:
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'''
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The "Docking with AutoDock Vina" tab was selected on SwissDock. A ligand by submitted by using SMILES string (found through the PubChem database). "Prepare ligand" was clicked, and a target (can use PDB ID) was submitted. The search space was defined, and x, y, and z coordinates for the center of the space being searched were chosen. The parameters were checked and docking was started. Results were analyzed.
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Perform an InterPro search for the sequence of 3B7F. Conifer protein superfamily identification and domains found. Identify related proteins in the domain organization. Think about what these related proteins have in common with the protein of interest, and what the function of the domains are. Repeat the InterPro search using "View a Structure" link on the main page. Explore the links that InterPro provides and compare these findings with the seqience search.
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'''Buffers and Solutions:
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'''
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Molecular Docking with SwissDock:
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General steps for Buffers and solutions included adding 80% of total DiH2O to a container, weighing and adding chemicals, adjusting pH as needed, and adding DiH2O to the total volume.
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Molecular Docking with SwissDock:
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Select "docking with AutoDock Vina" tab. Submit a ligand by using SMILES string (found through the PubChem database). Click "prepare ligand", and submit a target (can use PDB ID). Define the search space, choose x, y, and z coordinates for the center of the space being searched. Check the parameters and start docking. To view the results: click on "here" link provided in the email. A window with an image of the protein will show up. Below the structure, a table with ranked sets of models and energies will show up. Can overlap multiple ligand poses, and a .zip file can be exported and viewed in Chimera.
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Making Buffers and Solutions:
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General steps for Buffers and solutions include adding 80% of total DiH2O to a container, weighing and adding chemicals, adjusting pH as needed, and adding DiH2O to the total volume.
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Hand Casting Polyacrylamide Gels:
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'''Hand Casting Polyacrylamide Gels:
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'''
Made a 4% stacking gel at a pH of 6.8, and a 10% resolving gel at a pH of 8.8.
Made a 4% stacking gel at a pH of 6.8, and a 10% resolving gel at a pH of 8.8.
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Prepare the resolving and stacking gel solutions without APS or TEMED. Place a comb into the assembled gel sandwich with a marker, place a mark on the glass plate 1 cm below the teeth of the comb, and remove the comb. Add the APS and TEMED to the resolving gel and pour the solution to the mark. Using a Pasteur pipet overlay the monomer solution with water-saturated n-butanol. Allow the gel to polymerize for 45-60 minutes. Once done, pour off the overlay solution and rinse the top of the gel with diH2O. Dry the area above the separating gel with filter paper before pouring the stacking gel. Place the comb in the cassette and tilt so that the teeth are at a 10º angle. This prevents air from becoming trapped under the comb. Add APS and TEMED to the stacking solution and pour the solution down the spacer. Pour until all of the teeth are covered by the solution. Realign the comb in the sandwich and add monomer to fill the cassette completely. Allow the gel to polymerize for 30-45 minutes. Store the gels wrapped in a wet paper towel in the 4ºC fridge.
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Resolving and stacking gel solutions were prepared without APS or TEMED. A comb was placed into the assembled gel sandwich with a marker. A mark was placed on the glass plate 1 cm below the teeth of the comb, and the comb was removed. The APS and TEMED were added to the resolving gel, and the solution was poured to the mark. The gel was allowed to polymerize for 45-60 minutes. APS and TEMED were added to the stacking solution and poured above the resolving gel. The comb was placed in the cassette and tilted so that the teeth are at a 10º angle. This prevented air from becoming trapped under the comb. The gel was allowed to polymerize for 30-45 minutes. The gels were wrapped in a wet paper towel in the 4ºC fridge for storage.
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Expression of Proteins from Lactose-Inducible Vectors:
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First, make the LB Broth by adding 10g of tryptone, 10g of NaCl, and 5g of yeast extract. Add all of it into 1000 mL of millipore water. Move 5 mL of this mixture into an overnight culture tube. Autoclave it for 1.5 hours.
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'''Expression of Proteins from Lactose-Inducible Vectors:
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'''
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The LB Broth was made by adding 10g of tryptone, 10g of NaCl, and 5g of yeast extract together. This was added to 1000 mL of Millipore water. Five mL of this mixture was poured into an overnight culture tube. The other broth was autoclaved for 1.5 hours.
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Protein Purification:
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'''Protein Purification:
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'''
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500 mL of the protein was grown rather than 1L in an attempt to speed up induction. The overnights were grown at night on 03/16/2025 for 11 hours with 50 µg/mL of kanamycin. It was inoculated at 8 am on 03/17/2025. OD600 nm was taken in the morning until 0.4-0.8 OD (an OD of 0.4 was reached around 10 am). It was then induced with 1 nM IPTG and left to grow for three hours before centrifuging. In order to purify, the samples were centrifuged at 5000 x g for 20 minutes. Ten mL of lysis buffer was added, and the pellets were resuspended with a pipette (50 µL was added to a separate centrifuge tube). The cells were sonicated 5x for 30 seconds on ice in between each sonication (50 µL of a sample was added to a new centrifuge tube). The samples were centrifuged for 20 minutes at 15,000 x g (50 µL of a sample was added to a new centrifuge tube). The protein column was set up with 500 µL Ni-NTA beads and a lysis buffer was ran through it to equilibrate it (5x column volumes). The resin was pre-washed with a binding buffer. The cell extract was applied to the resin and allowed to enter. All of the supernatant was added (50 µL of a sample was added to a new centrifuge tube). The column was washed with 5 column volumes of buffer (50 µL of a sample was added to a new centrifuge tube). The column was eluted with 8 column volumes of buffer, the fractions were collected in 1 mL volumes and stored in 5 tubes. To store the column, 5 column volumes of water, and 1-2 mL of 20% EtOH were added, and the column was capped off and stored.
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500 mL of the protein was grown rather than 1L in an attempt to speed up induction. The overnights were grown at night on 03/16/2025 for 11 hours with 50 µg/mL of kanamycin. It was inoculated at 8 am on 03/17/2025. OD600 nm was taken in the morning until 0.4-0.8 OD (an of of 0.4 was reached around 10 am). It was then induced with 1 nM IPTG, and left to grow for three hours before centrifuging. In order to purify, the samples were centrifuged at 5000 x g for 20 minutes. 10 mL of lysis buffer was added and the pellets were resuspended with a pipette (50 µL was added to a seperate centrifuge tube). The cells were sonicated 5x for 30 seconds on ice in between each sonication (50 µL of a sample was added to a new centrifuge tube). The samples were centrifuged for 20 minutes at 15,000 x g (50 µL of a sample was added to a new centrifuge tube). The protein column was set up with 500 µL Ni-NTA beads and a lysis buffer was ran through it to equilibrate it (5x column volumes). The resin was pre-washed with a binding buffer. The cell extract was applied to the resin and allowed to enter. ALL of the supernatant was added (50 µL of a sample was added to a new centrifuge tube). The column was washed with 5 column volumes of buffer (50 µL of a sample was added to a new centrifuge tube). The column was eluted with 8 column volumes of buffer, the fractions were collected in 1 mL volumes and stored in 5 tubes. To store the column, 5 column volumes of water, and 1-2 mL of 20% EtOH was added and the column was capped off and stored.
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'''Protein Concentration:
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'''
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Seven BSA standards were prepared using the buffer that the protein was stored in (elution buffer). One mL of Bradford Reagent was added to each cuvette. Twenty µL of water was added to the zero cuvette, while 20 µL of each BSA standard or elution was added to the rest of cuvettes. The cuvettes were covered with parafilm and mixed several times by inversion. They were maintained at room temperature for 5-45 minutes. Absorbance was recorded at 595 nm with a Vernier spectrophotometer. A standard curve was constructed and used to find the concentration of the unknown protein in each elution.
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Protein Concentration:
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'''SDS-PAGE:
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'''
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For sample prep, the protein samples were treated with SDS sample buffer and boiled before application. The final concentration of SDS sample buffer loaded onto the gel was 1x.
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Obtain cuvettes for
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The set up was loaded with 1x running buffer. The ladder and samples were then loaded into the lanes (20 µL of samples loaded). The protective cover and cables were attached and connected to the power supply. The gel was run at a constant voltage of 120V. The gel was run until the sample line was about 1 cm from the bottom of the gel.
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SDS-PAGE:
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In order to stain the gel, it was removed from the gel sandwich and gently added to a shallow plastic container. InstantBlue stain was added to cover the gel, and it was agitated overnight. The stain was removed and the destaining solution added. The gel incubated for 30 minutes with a paper towel. It was then rinsed with water and captured on the gel imager.
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Protein Activity Assay:
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'''Protein Activity Assay:
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'''
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Three mL of buffer and 3 mg of substrate (PNPP or PNPA) were added to a cuvette. It was then placed in the spectrophotometer, and the instrument was zeroed at 405 nm. The desired amount of the protein of interest (25-75 uL) was added, and the solution was mixed quickly. The absorbance at 405 nm was read over time. Measurements were taken every minute until a change was observed, and then measurements were taken every 30 seconds.
== Structural Alignment Through SPRITE, Chimera, Dali, and BLAST ==
== Structural Alignment Through SPRITE, Chimera, Dali, and BLAST ==
Based on the findings through SPRITE and Chimera, 1XNY_C00 had the lowest RMSD value at 1.875 angstroms. Therefore, it is hypothesized that 3B7F was a carboxylase.
Based on the findings through SPRITE and Chimera, 1XNY_C00 had the lowest RMSD value at 1.875 angstroms. Therefore, it is hypothesized that 3B7F was a carboxylase.
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A yellow and green objects
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AI-generated content may be incorrect
Dali gave mainly xyloglucanase matches and no matches were carboxylases, the hypothesis that 3B7F was a carboxylase was proven to be wrong. It is not hypothesized that 3B7F is a xyloglucanase. This was due to the fact that 1XNY did not show up as a match in Dali.
Dali gave mainly xyloglucanase matches and no matches were carboxylases, the hypothesis that 3B7F was a carboxylase was proven to be wrong. It is not hypothesized that 3B7F is a xyloglucanase. This was due to the fact that 1XNY did not show up as a match in Dali.

Revision as of 00:20, 27 April 2025

Characterization and Preliminary Functionality of 3B7F


3B7F is a currently unknown protein in terms of its function. Based on current structural analysis, it consists of one unique chain with a mass of 45.04 kDa and an atom count of 3,216. Based on previous studies, 3B7F is assumed to be a glycosyl hydrolase, however, the function is still not entirely known.[1] Through the following procedures and data collection, the goal of this research was to analyze the sequence and structure of 3B7F in order to better understand its enzymatic function.

Research Question: What is the function of the 3B7F protein, and how can this be determined through both computational and wet lab techniques?

Relevance: The goal of this research is to determine the function of the 3BF7 protein in order to evaluate whether it can degrade xyloglucan or other types of carbohydrates and glycoconjugates in plants. Knowing this will allow future researchers to be able to better understand xyloglucan/carbohydrate glycoconjugate degradation in plants, and allow for known pathways to be expanded upon. Through this experimentation, we can also learn more about the ways in which both computational bioinformatics and wet lab techniques can aid in determining the function of a protein with a known structure.

Hypothesis: 3B7F is a xyloglucanase, a type of glycosyl hydrolase that acts to degrade xyloglucan in plant cell walls. It presents optimal activity in fairly acidic conditions and demonstrates potentially satisfactory binding with PNP phosphate and lysine p nitroanilide.

Structure of 3B7F

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

A) 1WAB. Protein Database, 1997. https://www.rcsb.org/structure/1WAB B) Ho, Y. S.; Sewnson, L.; Derewenda, U.; Serre, L.; Wei, Y.; Dauter, Z.; Hattori, M.; Adachi, T.; Aoki, J.; Arai, H.; Inoue, K.; Derewenda, Z. S. Brain acetylhydrolase that inactivates platelet-activating factor is a G-protein-like trimer. Nature, 1997, 385, 89-93. https://www.nature.com/articles/385089a0 https://www.nature.com/articles/385089a0 C) Miesfeld, R. L.; McEvoy, M. M. Biochemistry, 2nd ed.; W. W. Norton & Company, 2021. D) SGNH hydrolase superfamily. InterPro, 2017. https://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/entry/InterPro/IPR036514/ E) Molgaard, A.; Kauppinen, S.; Larsen, S. Rhamnogalacturonan acetylesterase elucidates the structure and function of a new family of hydrolases. Struct., 2000, 8(4), 373-383. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0969212600001180?via%3Dihub F) 4Q7Q. Protein Database, 2014. https://www.rcsb.org/structure/4Q7Q G) Rio, T. G. D.; et al. Complete genome sequence of Chitinophaga pinensis type strain (UQM 2034). Stand. Genomic. Sci., 2010, 2(1), 87-95. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3035255/ H) Akoh, C. C.; Lee, G.; Liaw, Y.; Huang, T.; Shaw, J. GDSL family of serine esterases/lipases. Prog. Lipid Res., 2004, 43(6), 534-552. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15522763/ I) 7BXD. Protein Database, 2021. https://www.rcsb.org/structure/7BXD J) Madej,T.; Lanczycki, C. J.; Zhang, D.; Thiessen, P. A.; Geer, R. C.; Marchler-Bauer, A.; Bryant, S. H. MMDB and VAST+: tracking structural similarities between macromolecular complexes. Nucleic Acids Res., 2014, 42(Database), D297-303. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkt1208


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