Sandbox Dicer Corey

From Proteopedia

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You may include any references to papers as in: the use of JSmol in Proteopedia <ref>DOI 10.1002/ijch.201300024</ref> or to the article describing Jmol <ref>PMID:21638687</ref> to the rescue.
You may include any references to papers as in: the use of JSmol in Proteopedia <ref>DOI 10.1002/ijch.201300024</ref> or to the article describing Jmol <ref>PMID:21638687</ref> to the rescue.
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== Function ==
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== History ==
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== Disease ==
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Dicer, or endoribonuclease Dicer, was discovered/named in 2001 by Emily Bernstein. She was a graduate student in Greg Hannon's lab at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York. She was trying to discover the enzyme that was responsible for removing small RNA fragments from double-stranded RNA. The dicer enzyme was found by isolating it from the RISC complex in the RNAi mechanism. It was known that RISC was not responsible for chopping up these small RNA fragments, so this complex was isolated from the system to locate the enzyme that was the source for these RNA fragments.
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Dicer is a member of the RNase III family, and it is found in multiple organisms, with the most common forms that are used in biochemistry being Mice and Human Dicer. The discovery of Dicer was important for understanding the regulation of gene expression and the epigenetic silencing of genes by miRNA.
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== Structure ==
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Human Dicer is
== Relevance ==
== Relevance ==
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== Structural highlights ==
 
This is a sample scene created with SAT to <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/1">color</scene> by Group, and another to make <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/2">a transparent representation</scene> of the protein. You can make your own scenes on SAT starting from scratch or loading and editing one of these sample scenes.
This is a sample scene created with SAT to <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/1">color</scene> by Group, and another to make <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/2">a transparent representation</scene> of the protein. You can make your own scenes on SAT starting from scratch or loading and editing one of these sample scenes.

Revision as of 23:36, 13 October 2014

==Introduction==

Human Endoribonuclease Dicer

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

  1. Hanson, R. M., Prilusky, J., Renjian, Z., Nakane, T. and Sussman, J. L. (2013), JSmol and the Next-Generation Web-Based Representation of 3D Molecular Structure as Applied to Proteopedia. Isr. J. Chem., 53:207-216. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijch.201300024
  2. Herraez A. Biomolecules in the computer: Jmol to the rescue. Biochem Mol Biol Educ. 2006 Jul;34(4):255-61. doi: 10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644. PMID:21638687 doi:10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644
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