Secondary structure
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
(New page: {{Stub}} Secondary structure refers to a protein's local three-dimensional structure, for example alpha helices and beta sheets are secondary structure. For more information, see [http://...) |
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| - | Secondary structure refers to a protein's local three-dimensional structure, for example alpha helices and beta sheets are secondary structure. | + | {{STRUCTURE_1dtg| PDB=1dtg | SCENE= Cartoon_backbone_representation/1dtg_ss/1 }} |
| + | Secondary structure refers to a protein's local three-dimensional structure, for example alpha helices and beta sheets are secondary structure. The structure on the right of a human transferrin n-lobe mutant (PDB code [[1dtg]]) is shown in cartoon backbone representation to highlight its secondary structure, with alpha-helices in magenta and beta-sheets in yellow. | ||
| + | ==Links== | ||
For more information, see [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondary_structure Wikipedia's page on secondary structure]. | For more information, see [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondary_structure Wikipedia's page on secondary structure]. | ||
Revision as of 18:53, 16 August 2008
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| 1dtg, resolution 2.40Å () | |||||||||
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| Ligands: | , | ||||||||
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| Resources: | FirstGlance, OCA, RCSB, PDBsum | ||||||||
| Coordinates: | save as pdb, mmCIF, xml | ||||||||
Secondary structure refers to a protein's local three-dimensional structure, for example alpha helices and beta sheets are secondary structure. The structure on the right of a human transferrin n-lobe mutant (PDB code 1dtg) is shown in cartoon backbone representation to highlight its secondary structure, with alpha-helices in magenta and beta-sheets in yellow.
Links
For more information, see Wikipedia's page on secondary structure.
Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)
Wayne Decatur, Karl Oberholser, Eric Martz, Joel L. Sussman, Karsten Theis, Eran Hodis

