Sandbox Reserved 1734

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Tertiary Structure:
Tertiary Structure:
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The tertiary structure of each monomer of PAH is organized from 2 alpha helices and 4 beta-strands into an alpha-beta sandwich motif (BaBBaB fold). The structural motif of an alpha-beta sandwich motif has the 4 antiparallel beta-strands flanked on one side by the 2 alpha-helices. The tertiary structure of a phenylalanine hydroxylase protein is built from an N-terminal regulatory domain (residues 1-117), a catalytic domain (residues 118-410), and a tetramerization domain (residues 411-452). The catalytic domain includes the binding sites for iron, substrate and cofactor.The binding sites are at residues 285, 290, and 330. (explain what the tetramerization domain is) The ACT domain is in the N-terminal regulatory domain where proposed enzyme binding to an allosteric site (residues 3-11).
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The tertiary structure of each monomer of PAH is organized from 2 alpha helices and 4 beta-strands into an alpha-beta sandwich motif (BaBBaB fold). The structural motif of an alpha-beta sandwich motif has the 4 antiparallel beta-strands flanked on one side by the 2 alpha-helices. The tertiary structure of a phenylalanine hydroxylase protein is built from an N-terminal regulatory domain (residues 1-117), a catalytic domain (residues 118-410), and a tetramerization domain (residues 411-452). The catalytic domain includes the binding sites for iron, substrate and cofactor.The binding sites are at residues 285, 290, and 330. The ACT domain is in the N-terminal regulatory domain where proposed enzyme binding to an allosteric site (residues 3-11).
Quaternary Structure:
Quaternary Structure:

Revision as of 23:37, 14 November 2022

This Sandbox is Reserved from August 30, 2022 through May 31, 2023 for use in the course Biochemistry I taught by Kimberly Lane at the Radford University, Radford, VA, USA. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1730 through Sandbox Reserved 1749.
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Structure

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References

  1. Hanson, R. M., Prilusky, J., Renjian, Z., Nakane, T. and Sussman, J. L. (2013), JSmol and the Next-Generation Web-Based Representation of 3D Molecular Structure as Applied to Proteopedia. Isr. J. Chem., 53:207-216. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijch.201300024
  2. Herraez A. Biomolecules in the computer: Jmol to the rescue. Biochem Mol Biol Educ. 2006 Jul;34(4):255-61. doi: 10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644. PMID:21638687 doi:10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644
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