Fibroins
From Proteopedia
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| - | Fibroins are proteins that constitute silk fibers. Fibroins are large complex proteins and the specific structural details of those making up different types of silk are different, but all fibroins have some common characteristics. Interesting general information on spider silk and a model of one type of a spider silk molecule is at<ref>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_silk Wikipedia]</ref>. This model of spider silk shows two repeating domains that all fibroins contain. One domain is characterized as being amorphous, also called flexible, disordered segments, and the other one, symbolized by the boxes, has a highly ordered, repetitive, crystal-like structure. The objective of this exercise is to explicate this <b>ordered</b> domain of | + | Fibroins are proteins that constitute silk fibers. Fibroins are large complex proteins and the specific structural details of those making up different types of silk are different, but all fibroins have some common characteristics. Interesting general information on spider silk and a model of one type of a spider silk molecule is at<ref>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_silk Wikipedia]</ref>. This model of spider silk shows two repeating domains that all fibroins contain. One domain is characterized as being amorphous, also called flexible, disordered segments, and the other one, symbolized by the boxes, has a highly ordered, repetitive, crystal-like structure. The objective of this exercise is to explicate this <b>ordered</b> domain of fibroins. |
<StructureSection load='fibroin.pdb' size='500' side='right' caption='Structure of a model fibroin' scene='Fibroins/Chain_a/1'> | <StructureSection load='fibroin.pdb' size='500' side='right' caption='Structure of a model fibroin' scene='Fibroins/Chain_a/1'> | ||
Revision as of 23:56, 16 October 2012
Fibroins are proteins that constitute silk fibers. Fibroins are large complex proteins and the specific structural details of those making up different types of silk are different, but all fibroins have some common characteristics. Interesting general information on spider silk and a model of one type of a spider silk molecule is at[1]. This model of spider silk shows two repeating domains that all fibroins contain. One domain is characterized as being amorphous, also called flexible, disordered segments, and the other one, symbolized by the boxes, has a highly ordered, repetitive, crystal-like structure. The objective of this exercise is to explicate this ordered domain of fibroins.
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