User:Michael Roberts/Open-Day Demo

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
m
Line 22: Line 22:
'''Amino acid trace'''
'''Amino acid trace'''
-
Here's a much more simplified view that <scene name='70/703491/Basic_representations/4<scene name='70/703491/Basic_representations/5'>Text To Be Displayed</scene>'>traces the chains</scene> of amino acids that make up the protein. Now we can see much more clearly the start and end of each chain (there are 3 chains in chymotrypsin, each coloured differently in this view), and how they are interwoven in the 3D structure. But this is now simplified too much to understand the details of the structure!
+
Here's a much more simplified view that <scene name='70/703491/Basic_representations/4'>shows a trace of the backbone</scene> of the amino acids that make up the protein. Now we can see much more clearly the start and end of each chain (there are 3 chains in chymotrypsin, each coloured differently in this view), and how they are interwoven in the 3D structure. But this is now simplified too much to understand the details of the structure!
One question this view does raise, is how the three separate chains are held together in the right way? The answer is the <scene name='70/703491/Basic_representations/5'>presence of disulphide bridges</scene> that link the chains together to form the correct overall structure.
One question this view does raise, is how the three separate chains are held together in the right way? The answer is the <scene name='70/703491/Basic_representations/5'>presence of disulphide bridges</scene> that link the chains together to form the correct overall structure.

Revision as of 11:38, 20 October 2016

==Interactive visualisation of 3D protein structures==

Understanding the 3-dimensional structures of proteins is key to understanding their functions. Identifying the positions of all the different atoms that make up an individual protein (there are usually several thousand atoms in a single protein) is a big job, but once achieved, we can use a range of tools to visualise protein structures. Here, we'll have a look at some different ways of representing molecular structures of proteins, and in so doing, start to see the key structural elements that characterise protein structure.


PDB ID 1afq

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Michael Roberts

Personal tools