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Basics of Protein Structure
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==Protein Structure Data== | ==Protein Structure Data== | ||
| - | The [[Protein Data Bank|World Wide Protein Data Bank]] (WWPDB) is where all experimentally-determined published protein structures are made freely available. Each model has a unique accession code, called a [[PDB code]]. One model of human insulin, shown at right has the PDB code [[3i40]]. Many examples are illustrated in the [http://atlas.molviz.org Atlas of Macromolecules]. Looking for a model of a specific protein? See [[Practical_Guide_to_Homology_Modeling#Is_there_an_empirical_model.3F|Is there an empirical model?]] | + | The [[Protein Data Bank|World Wide Protein Data Bank]] (WWPDB) is where all experimentally-determined published protein structures are made freely available. Each model has a unique accession code, called a [[PDB code]]. One model of human insulin, shown at right has the PDB code [[3i40]]. Many examples are illustrated in the [http://atlas.molviz.org Atlas of Macromolecules]. Looking for a model of a specific protein? See [[Practical_Guide_to_Homology_Modeling#Is_there_an_empirical_model.3F|Is there an empirical model?]] After you find a PDB code of interest, see [[Introduction to molecular visualization]]. |
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== | ||
Revision as of 19:01, 1 February 2020
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