Calculate structure
From Proteopedia
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* Using the method used for myohemerytherin above, look for β-turns that have a Pro at position 3 but do not have hbonds. | * Using the method used for myohemerytherin above, look for β-turns that have a Pro at position 3 but do not have hbonds. | ||
* <scene name='Calculate_structure/Domain_2_3turns2/4'>High lite</scene>, as three or four residue segments, the one residue segments in the summary below. (Remember to display the hbonds by running ''calculate hbonds structure'' from the console.) Only one segment has a residue colored blue, indicating a turn, and the other residues are colored as being part of a helix, sheet or non-secondary structure (white). Improve the view by displaying these <scene name='Calculate_structure/Domain_2_3turns3/6'>segments in isolation</scene>, and reveal that they look very much like γ-turns. None of these segments have the hbond required for 3-turn, but three of the segments have hbonds involved in 4turns (773-776, 774-777, 805-808) and 5turns (772-776, 774-778), and none of the residues involved are colored blue. One has to wonder why the segments without hbonds are listed in the summary as T segments. As can be seen in the summary below the values of the torsional angles of the central residue of the three residue segments are similar to those for inverse γ-turns, but the psi values are all negative. | * <scene name='Calculate_structure/Domain_2_3turns2/4'>High lite</scene>, as three or four residue segments, the one residue segments in the summary below. (Remember to display the hbonds by running ''calculate hbonds structure'' from the console.) Only one segment has a residue colored blue, indicating a turn, and the other residues are colored as being part of a helix, sheet or non-secondary structure (white). Improve the view by displaying these <scene name='Calculate_structure/Domain_2_3turns3/6'>segments in isolation</scene>, and reveal that they look very much like γ-turns. None of these segments have the hbond required for 3-turn, but three of the segments have hbonds involved in 4turns (773-776, 774-777, 805-808) and 5turns (772-776, 774-778), and none of the residues involved are colored blue. One has to wonder why the segments without hbonds are listed in the summary as T segments. As can be seen in the summary below the values of the torsional angles of the central residue of the three residue segments are similar to those for inverse γ-turns, but the psi values are all negative. | ||
- | * Reveal the nature of the <scene name='Calculate_structure/Domain_2_4turn/2'>remaining T segments</scene>. Inspecting them for hbonds (after running ''calculate hbonds structure'' from the console) reveals that all but one of these segments are β-turns. With some of them it is difficult to determine from the segments in the summary the actual residues making up the turn. Using the information in the summary and | + | * Reveal the nature of the <scene name='Calculate_structure/Domain_2_4turn/2'>remaining T segments</scene>. Inspecting them for hbonds (after running ''calculate hbonds structure'' from the console) reveals that all but one of these segments are β-turns. Displaying these <scene name='Calculate_structure/Domain_2_4turn2/5'>turns in isolation</scene> makes it easier to observe the hbonds. With some of them it is difficult to determine from the segments in the summary the actual residues making up the turn. Using the information in the summary and one can determine which residues make up the turns. Notice that the last segment (820-826) actually contains several turns. A type of turn not described by Miner-White, et. al. |
'''SUMMARY of T's for Domain 2 of Chain A Glycogen Phosphorylase:'''(All other segments deleted.)<br> | '''SUMMARY of T's for Domain 2 of Chain A Glycogen Phosphorylase:'''(All other segments deleted.)<br> | ||
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T : A:822_A:825 6-turn 821-826<br> | T : A:822_A:825 6-turn 821-826<br> | ||
- | 487-489,494-496,727-729,772-774,776-778,805-808; 524-527,593-596,610-613,633-636,636-639,668-671,675-678,682-685,693-696,748-751,751-754, | + | 487-489,494-496,727-729,772-774,776-778,805-808; 524-527,593-596,610-613,633-636,636-639,668-671,675-678,682-685,693-696,748-751,751-754,820-826 |
'''Detection of Known γ-turns''' | '''Detection of Known γ-turns''' |
Revision as of 20:54, 28 July 2011
An important part of protein structure is the secondary structure which is made up of helices, sheets and turns, and Jmol is capable of determining and displaying these three types of structures with limitations as described in How Jmol Determines Secondary Structure . The calculate structure[1] is a command which does a more fundamental identification of these secondary structures by re-calculating the secondary structure, but it is not available in Jmol 11.8 which is used in Proteopedia as of June 2011. It is available in Jmol ver. 12. Calculate hbonds structure is also available in ver. 12, and it identifies and displays the hbonds involved in these three types of secondary structures[1].
Any one page of Proteopedia can be run in the signed ver. 12 by appending "?JMOLJAR=http://chemapps.stolaf.edu/jmol/docs/examples-12/JmolAppletSigned0.jar" to the url of the page and reloading the page. The user must give permission for the signed version of Jmol to open, and when it does it has a red frank, whereas in the unsigned version it is grey. Click on the Jmol frank, in the main menu click on Console, in the bottom box of the console enter the commands:select protein; calculate structure; cartoon; color structure; calculate hbonds structure and then click Run.
The objectives of this article is:
- To describe what structures are identified by calculate structure and briefly how it is done.
- To identify problems associated with using the results of calculate structure to identify β and γ-turns.
- To illustrate with examples.
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References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 A detailed description is at [1].
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 W. Kabsch & C. Sanders, Biopolymers, 22, 2577-2636, 1983.
- ↑ Characteristics of β-turn classes
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Miner-White, EJ, et. al. One type of gamma turn, rather than the other, gives rise to chain reversal in proteins. J. Mol. Bio. 204, 1983, pp. 777-782.