Sandbox Reserved 334

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Ribonuclease A <ref name= “redux”> PMID:21079871</ref>
Ribonuclease A <ref name= “redux”> PMID:21079871</ref>
=Structure and Function=
=Structure and Function=
 +
RNase S is composed of two fragments: the small fragment, S-peptide (residues 1-20), and the large fragment, S-protein (residues 21-124) <ref name= “Original”> PMID:11015216</ref>
=Mechanism=
=Mechanism=
==Dissociation Mechanism==
==Dissociation Mechanism==
=references=
=references=
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 06:44, 17 March 2011

This Sandbox is Reserved from January 10, 2010, through April 10, 2011 for use in BCMB 307-Proteins course taught by Andrea Gorrell at the University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC, Canada.
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Ribonuclease S

Contents


PDB ID 1d5h

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
1d5h, resolution 2.25Å ()
Ligands:
Non-Standard Residues:
Related: 1rnv, 1d5d, 1d5e
Resources: FirstGlance, OCA, PDBsum, RCSB
Coordinates: save as pdb, mmCIF, xml


Ribonuclease S Ribonuclease A [1]

Structure and Function

RNase S is composed of two fragments: the small fragment, S-peptide (residues 1-20), and the large fragment, S-protein (residues 21-124) [2]

Mechanism

Dissociation Mechanism

references

  1. Watkins RW, Arnold U, Raines RT. Ribonuclease S redux. Chem Commun (Camb). 2011 Jan 21;47(3):973-5. Epub 2010 Nov 16. PMID:21079871 doi:10.1039/c0cc03864d
  2. Ratnaparkhi GS, Varadarajan R. Thermodynamic and structural studies of cavity formation in proteins suggest that loss of packing interactions rather than the hydrophobic effect dominates the observed energetics. Biochemistry. 2000 Oct 10;39(40):12365-74. PMID:11015216
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