User:Judy Voet/Lysozyme

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<applet load='aln_1H6M_to_1HEW_2.pdb' size='300' frame='true' align='right' caption='Insert caption here' />
<applet load='aln_1H6M_to_1HEW_2.pdb' size='300' frame='true' align='right' caption='Insert caption here' />
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<scene name='User:Judy_Voet/Lysozyme/Lysozyme1/4'>HEW Lysozyme with hexamer</scene>
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Lysozyme was the first enzyme whose x-ray structure was determined. The folllowing scene, <scene name='User:Judy_Voet/Lysozyme/1hew/1'>1HEW</scene> shows this structure containing a trisaccharide bound to the active site. David Phillips, who determined the structure in 1965, saw that the active site was large enough to fit three more saccharide units and his group built a model of a hexasaccharide
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<scene name='User:Judy_Voet/Lysozyme/Lysozyme1/4'>HEW Lysozyme with hexamer</scene>fit into the active site.

Revision as of 14:28, 3 November 2009

Insert caption here

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Lysozyme was the first enzyme whose x-ray structure was determined. The folllowing scene, shows this structure containing a trisaccharide bound to the active site. David Phillips, who determined the structure in 1965, saw that the active site was large enough to fit three more saccharide units and his group built a model of a hexasaccharide fit into the active site.

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Judy Voet

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