User:Rebeca B. Candia/Sandbox 1
From Proteopedia
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<StructureSection load='2fql' size='340' side='right' caption='Caption for this structure' scene='78/788815/Spacefill_model/1'> | <StructureSection load='2fql' size='340' side='right' caption='Caption for this structure' scene='78/788815/Spacefill_model/1'> | ||
| - | Frataxin is a protein capable of storing, releasing and detoxifying intracellular iron. | + | Frataxin is a protein capable of storing, releasing and detoxifying intracellular iron. In humans, a mutation in this protein can trigger the Friedreich's ataxia, a neurodegenerative disease caused due to incapacity to form iron-sulfur groups necessary to activating the mitochondrial enzyme involved in the electron transportation chain, aconitase. |
| - | It | + | It consists of a polymeric molecule that, altought capable of forming larger complexes (as the 24 subunit oligomer detected by electron microscopy), exerts its activity by association of three subunits, enough to form a central channel where the ferroxidation takes place. |
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| + | In the following paragraphs, we describe the general features of its structure in the trimeric form as obtaneid by X-ray cristalography at 3Å resolution. The protein used was obtained from the Y37A yeast, which has a 40% sequence identity to the human frataxin. | ||
In the box at the right, it is possible to see its <scene name='78/788815/Spacefill_model/1'>general structure</scene> in a space-fill model, in which <font color='violet'><b>violet</b></font>, <font color='orangered'><b>orange</b></font> and <span style="color:aquamarine;background-color:darkgrey;font-weight:bold;">light-green</span> represent, each, a different monomer from the entire molecule. | In the box at the right, it is possible to see its <scene name='78/788815/Spacefill_model/1'>general structure</scene> in a space-fill model, in which <font color='violet'><b>violet</b></font>, <font color='orangered'><b>orange</b></font> and <span style="color:aquamarine;background-color:darkgrey;font-weight:bold;">light-green</span> represent, each, a different monomer from the entire molecule. | ||
Revision as of 02:55, 17 June 2018
Frataxin
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References
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