Sandbox Reserved 1066

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This is the <scene name='69/698726/Overall_structure_cartoon/1'>overall structure of FadD13</scene>
This is the <scene name='69/698726/Overall_structure_cartoon/1'>overall structure of FadD13</scene>
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FadD13 is composed of 503 amino acid residues divided into three main regions: The <scene name='69/694233/Domains/1'>N-terminal domain</scene> (residues 1-395) and <scene name='69/694233/C-terminal_domain/1'>C-terminal domain</scene> (residues 402-503) which are connected via a flexible linker (residues 396-401).<ref name="OUR PAPER"/>
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FadD13 is composed of 503 amino acid residues divided into three main regions: The <scene name='69/694233/Domains/1'>N-terminal domain</scene> (residues 1-395) and <scene name='69/694233/C-terminal_domain/1'>C-terminal domain</scene> (residues 402-503) which are connected via a flexible linker (residues 396-401).<ref name="Our Paper"/>
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== Hydrophobic Tunnel ==
== Hydrophobic Tunnel ==
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The hydrophobic tunnel of FadD13 is essential to the transport and accommodation of very long fatty acids from the membrane into the cell. This tunnel runs through the middle of FadD13 from the arginine rich lid loop to the ATP binding site and is situated between the and alpha helices α8-α9 and parallel beta sheet β9- β14.<ref name="OUR PAPER"/>
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The hydrophobic tunnel of FadD13 is essential to the transport and accommodation of very long fatty acids from the membrane into the cell. This tunnel runs through the middle of FadD13 from the arginine rich lid loop to the ATP binding site and is situated between the and alpha helices α8-α9 and parallel beta sheet β9- β14.<ref name="Our Paper"/>
== Active Site ==
== Active Site ==

Revision as of 17:37, 3 April 2015

This Sandbox is Reserved from 02/09/2015, through 05/31/2016 for use in the course "CH462: Biochemistry 2" taught by Geoffrey C. Hoops at the Butler University. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1051 through Sandbox Reserved 1080.
To get started:
  • Click the edit this page tab at the top. Save the page after each step, then edit it again.
  • Click the 3D button (when editing, above the wikitext box) to insert Jmol.
  • show the Scene authoring tools, create a molecular scene, and save it. Copy the green link into the page.
  • Add a description of your scene. Use the buttons above the wikitext box for bold, italics, links, headlines, etc.

More help: Help:Editing

Contents

Your Heading Here (maybe something like 'Structure')

Very Long Chain Fatty Acyl CoA Synthetase (FadD13)

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
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Andersson CS, Lundgren CA, Magnusdottir A, Ge C, Wieslander A, Molina DM, Hogbom M. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis Very-Long-Chain Fatty Acyl-CoA Synthetase: Structural Basis for Housing Lipid Substrates Longer than the Enzyme. Structure. 2012 May 2. PMID:22560731 doi:10.1016/j.str.2012.03.012

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External Resources

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