User:Karsten Theis/turns
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
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In the structure fragment shown, the alpha carbon atoms are numbered 1 through 4 (relative numbering, sometimes also given as n, n+1, n+2, n+3), and the distance between the carbonyl oxygen and the amide hydrogen is indicated (dashed line and magnitude). Side chains are truncated to just show the beta carbon, and residues 1 and 4 have some main chain omitted for clarity. | In the structure fragment shown, the alpha carbon atoms are numbered 1 through 4 (relative numbering, sometimes also given as n, n+1, n+2, n+3), and the distance between the carbonyl oxygen and the amide hydrogen is indicated (dashed line and magnitude). Side chains are truncated to just show the beta carbon, and residues 1 and 4 have some main chain omitted for clarity. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Another way of looking at it is that turns consist of three <jmol><jmolLink> | ||
+ | <script> | ||
+ | draw ID p68a polygon [{68.CA} {69.H} {69.CA}] color blue; | ||
+ | draw ID p68b polygon [{68.CA} {69.CA} {68.O}] color red; | ||
+ | draw ID p67a polygon [{67.CA} {68.H} {68.CA}] color blue; | ||
+ | draw ID p67b polygon [{67.CA} {68.CA} {67.O}] color red; | ||
+ | draw ID p69a polygon [{69.CA} {70.H} {70.CA}] color blue; | ||
+ | draw ID p69b polygon [{69.CA} {70.CA} {69.O}] color red; | ||
+ | delay 1; hide protein; delay 1; display protein; draw ID p* delete; | ||
+ | </script> | ||
+ | <text>peptide planes</text> | ||
+ | </jmolLink> | ||
+ | </jmol>, whose relative orientation is determined by the phi/psi angles of residue 2 and 3. | ||
+ | |||
To get a low energy conformation, you want a good hydrogen bond, i.e. carbonyl oxygen, amide hydrogen and nitrogen colinear <jmol> | To get a low energy conformation, you want a good hydrogen bond, i.e. carbonyl oxygen, amide hydrogen and nitrogen colinear <jmol> |
Revision as of 16:02, 11 February 2025
A beta turn is a secondary structure element consisting of four consecutive amino acids (or three consecutive peptide planes). The geometry of turns correspond to a change in the direction of the polypeptide backbone, with a short distance between the first and fourth alpha carbon.
Turns in 3D
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References
- ↑ de Brevern AG. A Perspective on the (Rise and Fall of) Protein β-Turns. Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Oct 14;23(20):12314. PMID:36293166 doi:10.3390/ijms232012314