1coi

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search

OCA (Talk | contribs)
(New page: 200px<br /><applet load="1coi" size="450" color="white" frame="true" align="right" spinBox="true" caption="1coi, resolution 2.1&Aring;" /> '''DESIGNED TRIMERIC COI...)
Next diff →

Revision as of 23:37, 24 November 2007


1coi, resolution 2.1Å

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

DESIGNED TRIMERIC COILED COIL-VALD

Overview

The three-dimensional structure of the 29-residue designed coiled coil, having the amino acid sequence acetyl-E VEALEKK VAALESK VQALEKK, VEALEHG-amide has been determined and refined to a crystallographic, R-factor of 21.4% for all data from 10-A to 2.1-A resolution. This, molecule is called coil-VaLd because it contains valine in the a heptad, positions and leucine in the d heptad positions. In the trigonal crystal, three molecules, related by a crystallographic threefold axis, form a, parallel three-helix bundle. The bundles are stacked head-to-tail to form, a continuous coiled coil along the c-direction of the crystal. The, contacts among the three helices within the coiled coil are mainly, hydrophobic: four layers of valine residues alternate with four layers of, leucine residues to form the core of the bundle. In contrast, mostly, hydrophilic contacts mediate the interaction between trimers: here a total, of two direct protein--protein hydrogen bonds are found. Based on the, structure, we propose a scheme for designing crystals of peptides, containing continuous two-, three-, and four-stranded coiled coils.

About this Structure

1COI is a Protein complex structure of sequences from Synthetic construct with SO4, ACE and NH2 as ligands. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

The crystal structure of the designed trimeric coiled coil coil-VaLd: implications for engineering crystals and supramolecular assemblies., Ogihara NL, Weiss MS, Degrado WF, Eisenberg D, Protein Sci. 1997 Jan;6(1):80-8. PMID:9007979

Page seeded by OCA on Sun Nov 25 01:44:58 2007

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools