Pituitary Homeobox Protein 1

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== Structural highlights ==
== Structural highlights ==
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The known structure of the PITX1 protein in humans is composed of three alpha helices and a beta sheet. It is a monomer, as it is composed of amino acids starting and finishing with arginine. Arginine is present at the carboxy-terminus and at the amino-terminus. The full structure has not been entirely found yet. The entire found structure is DNA binding. In experiments, the researchers will often create mutant versions of the protein by altering the <scene name='88/881659/N-terminus_arginine/1'>N-terminus</scene>. The N-terminus is where epitopes bind to the protein, thus making this part of the structure integral to the role of the overall protein. When researchers attempted to use mutants of the protein with the N-terminus deleted, the data collected was inconclusive as the epitopes usually bind to this site and therefore had nowhere to go in these trials. The C-terminal end of the protein is what gives it the ability to bind to SF-1 and other molecules in a sort of ligand-binding domain.3 There was also found to be a certain set of forty-nine amino acids within PITX1 that carries great influence on its activation, however this region has not been explicitly identified. The serin and proline motifs within the protein are essential in its activation as well along with a FACE region, which includes fourteen amino domains.
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The known structure of the PITX1 protein in humans is composed of three alpha helices and a beta sheet. It is a monomer, as it is composed of amino acids starting and finishing with arginine. Arginine is present at the carboxy-terminus and at the amino-terminus. The full structure has not been entirely found yet. The entire found structure is DNA binding. In experiments, the researchers will often create mutant versions of the protein by altering the <scene name='88/881659/N-terminus/1'>N-terminus</scene>. The N-terminus is where epitopes bind to the protein, thus making this part of the structure integral to the role of the overall protein. When researchers attempted to use mutants of the protein with the N-terminus deleted, the data collected was inconclusive as the epitopes usually bind to this site and therefore had nowhere to go in these trials. The C-terminal end of the protein is what gives it the ability to bind to SF-1 and other molecules in a sort of ligand-binding domain.3 There was also found to be a certain set of forty-nine amino acids within PITX1 that carries great influence on its activation, however this region has not been explicitly identified. The serin and proline motifs within the protein are essential in its activation as well along with a FACE region, which includes fourteen amino domains.
This is a sample scene created with SAT to <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/1">color</scene> by Group, and another to make <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/2">a transparent representation</scene> of the protein. You can make your own scenes on SAT starting from scratch or loading and editing one of these sample scenes.
This is a sample scene created with SAT to <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/1">color</scene> by Group, and another to make <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/2">a transparent representation</scene> of the protein. You can make your own scenes on SAT starting from scratch or loading and editing one of these sample scenes.

Revision as of 04:50, 28 April 2021

PTX1

PITX1 (PTX1)

Pituitary Homeobox Protein 1

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
is named the pituitary homeobox protein 1. It is encoded by the PITX1 gene. It is part of the homeobox family and thus is a homeodomain protein.

Caption for this structure

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Jared Viggers, Alexander Berchansky, Michal Harel

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