Calculate structure

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Line 48: Line 48:
H : A:19_A:37<br>
H : A:19_A:37<br>
H : A:41_A:64<br>
H : A:41_A:64<br>
-
T : A:65_A:66 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_63/3'>Display turn</scene><br>
+
T : A:65_A:66 β-turn 63-66 - 63 & 64 part of a helix, 65 & 66 are blue. <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_63/3'>Display turn</scene><br>
-
T : A:68_A:69 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_67/6'>Display turn</scene>; run the command ''calculate hbonds structure'' in the console to see the hbonds<br>
+
T : A:68_A:69 β-turn 67-70 - 70 is part of a helix, 67 & 68 are white & blue, 69 entirely blue. <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_67/6'>Display turn</scene>; run the command ''calculate hbonds structure'' in the console to see the hbonds<br>
H : A:70_A:85<br>
H : A:70_A:85<br>
-
T : A:86_A:86 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_84/2'>Display turn</scene><br>
+
T : A:86_A:86 β-turn 84-87 - 84 & 85 are part of a helix, 86 is colored blue & 87 is white. <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_84/2'>Display turn</scene><br>
H : A:93_A:109<br>
H : A:93_A:109<br>
-
T : A:110_A:110 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_110/2'>Display turn</scene><br>
+
T : A:110_A:110 β-turn 110-113 - 110 is blue, last three are part of a helix. <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_110/2'>Display turn</scene><br>
G : A:111_A:114<br>
G : A:111_A:114<br>
-
T : A:115_A:117 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_114/2'>Display turn</scene><br>
+
T : A:115_A:117 β-turn 114-117, 4-turn 114-118 - 114 is part of a helix, 115-117 & part of 118 are blue, 118 is partially white. <scene name='Calculate_structure/Turn_114/2'>Display turn</scene><br>
<scene name='Calculate_structure/Turns_5_88/1'>Display the two class VIb turns</scene><br>
<scene name='Calculate_structure/Turns_5_88/1'>Display the two class VIb turns</scene><br>
Key - '''H''': α-helix; '''B''': β-bridge; '''E''': β-strand; '''G''': 3<sub>10</sub>-helix; '''I''': π-helix; '''T''': 3-, 4-, 5-turn; '''S''': bend.
Key - '''H''': α-helix; '''B''': β-bridge; '''E''': β-strand; '''G''': 3<sub>10</sub>-helix; '''I''': π-helix; '''T''': 3-, 4-, 5-turn; '''S''': bend.

Revision as of 18:29, 3 August 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 are:

  • Describe what structures are identified by calculate structure and briefly how it is done.
  • Summarize the results of using calculate structure to identify β in several proteins.
  • Show details of the above identifications.

PDB ID 2mhr.pdb

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 A detailed description is at [1].
  2. 2.0 2.1 W. Kabsch & C. Sanders, Biopolymers, 22, 2577-2636, 1983.
  3. Characteristics of β-turn classes
  4. 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.

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Karl Oberholser, Jaime Prilusky, Wayne Decatur

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