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<td style="padding: 10px;>How to author pages and contribute to Proteopedia</td>
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<td style="padding: 10px;>[[http://proteopedia.org/w/Help:Contents#For_authors:_contributing_content|How to author pages and contribute to Proteopedia]]</td>
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<td style="padding: 10px;>How to get an Interactive 3D Complement for your paper</td>
<td style="padding: 10px;>How to get an Interactive 3D Complement for your paper</td>

Revision as of 13:24, 18 October 2018

Because life has more than 2D, Proteopedia helps to understand relationships between structure and function. Proteopedia is a free, collaborative 3D-encyclopedia of proteins & other molecules. ISSN 2310-6301

Selected Pages Art on Science Journals Education

Lifecycle of SARS-CoV-2

What happens if a SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus enters your lung? This molecular animation visualises how the virus particle can take over the host cell and turns it into a virus factory. Eventually, the host cell produces so many viral particles that it dies and releases numerous new virus particles. >>> Visit this page >>>

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Molecular Sculpture

by Eric Martz
A historical review on sculptures and physical models of macromolecules.

>>> Visit this page >>>

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Geobacter nanowire structure surprise.

F Wang, Y Gu, JP O'Brien, SM Yi, SE Yalcin, V Srikanth, C Shen, D Vu, NL Ing, AI Hochbaum, EH Egelman, NS Malvankar. Cell 2019 doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2019.03.029
Bacteria living in anaerobic environments (no oxygen) need alternative electron acceptors in order to get energy from their food. An acceptor abundant in the earth's crust is red iron oxide ("rust"), which gets reduced to black iron oxide (magnetite). Many bacteria, such as Geobacter, get their metabolic energy by transferring electrons to acceptors that are multiple cell diameters distant, using protein nanowires. These were long thought to be pili. But when the structure of the nanowires was solved in 2019, to everyone's surprise, they turned out to be unprecedented linear polymers of multi-heme cytochromes. The hemes form an electrically conductive chain in the cores of these nanowires.

>>> Visit I3DC Interactive Visualizations >>>

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Tutorial: The Ramachandran principle, phi (φ) and psi (ψ) angles in proteins

by Eric Martz
The Ramachandran Principle says that alpha helices, beta strands, and turns are the most likely conformations for a polypeptide chain to adopt, because most other conformations are impossible due to steric collisions between atoms. Check Show Clashes to see where non-bonded atoms are overlapping, and thus in physically impossible positions.

>>> Visit this tutorial >>>

Other Selected Pages More Art on Science Other Journals More on Education
[to author pages and contribute to Proteopedia] How to get an Interactive 3D Complement for your paper How to author pages and contribute to Proteopedia

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Joel L. Sussman, Jaime Prilusky

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