User:Karsten Theis/overall views

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<scriptWhenChecked>display displayed or ATP</scriptWhenChecked>
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<text>text of the checkbox</text>
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Domains are whatever the authors define them as. In the case of UvrB, we highlighted the parts similar to other helicases in yellow and red, while the green, blue and cyan elements were novel. We did try to separate the protein into parts with separate hydrophobic cores (e.g. <scene name='78/780454/Domain3_core/3'>red domain</scene>) along sensible boundaries, but there is mostly no experimental evidence. However, the blue domain is a real domain in the sense that it was deleted in a protein variant that retained function (except UvrA-binding, which is through the blue domain). In a different study, the cyan element was deleted, and again, the remainder of the protein folded properly (but no longer bound tightly to DNA, which is via the cyan hairpin loop).
Domains are whatever the authors define them as. In the case of UvrB, we highlighted the parts similar to other helicases in yellow and red, while the green, blue and cyan elements were novel. We did try to separate the protein into parts with separate hydrophobic cores (e.g. <scene name='78/780454/Domain3_core/3'>red domain</scene>) along sensible boundaries, but there is mostly no experimental evidence. However, the blue domain is a real domain in the sense that it was deleted in a protein variant that retained function (except UvrA-binding, which is through the blue domain). In a different study, the cyan element was deleted, and again, the remainder of the protein folded properly (but no longer bound tightly to DNA, which is via the cyan hairpin loop).

Revision as of 20:05, 26 August 2018

Common overall views of a structure

This is a collections of how protein structures are depicted in publications. The most common views show

  • domains
  • conservation
  • charge distribution
  • contact interfaces

The protein used as example is UvrB in complex with ATP (PDB ID 1d9z). This protein not only binds to ATP, but also to DNA and to another DNA repair protein, UvrA. As you look at the various ways protein structures are depicted, you can zoom in to the different binding surfaces or zoom out to the standard view showing the entire protein with the "business" side facing you.




Caption for this structure

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Karsten Theis

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