This old version of Proteopedia is provided for student assignments while the new version is undergoing repairs. Content and edits done in this old version of Proteopedia after March 1, 2026 will eventually be lost when it is retired in about June of 2026.


Apply for new accounts at the new Proteopedia. Your logins will work in both the old and new versions.


1e0n

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search

OCA (Talk | contribs)
(New page: 200px<br /><applet load="1e0n" size="450" color="white" frame="true" align="right" spinBox="true" caption="1e0n" /> '''YJQ8WW DOMAIN FROM SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISAE''...)
Next diff →

Revision as of 11:35, 20 November 2007


1e0n

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

YJQ8WW DOMAIN FROM SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISAE

Overview

Two new NMR structures of WW domains, the mouse formin binding protein and, a putative 84.5 kDa protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, show that this, domain, only 35 amino acids in length, defines the smallest monomeric, triple-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet protein domain that is stable in, the absence of disulfide bonds, tightly bound ions or ligands. The, structural roles of conserved residues have been studied using, site-directed mutagenesis of both wild type domains. Crucial interactions, responsible for the stability of the WW structure have been identified., Based on a network of highly conserved long range interactions across the, beta-sheet structure that supports the WW fold and on a systematic, analysis of conserved residues in the WW family, we have designed a folded, prototype WW sequence.

About this Structure

1E0N is a Single protein structure of sequence from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

Structural analysis of WW domains and design of a WW prototype., Macias MJ, Gervais V, Civera C, Oschkinat H, Nat Struct Biol. 2000 May;7(5):375-9. PMID:10802733

Page seeded by OCA on Tue Nov 20 13:42:55 2007

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools