Secondary structure

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<applet load='1dtg' size='500' frame='true' align='right' caption='1dtg' scene='Cartoon_backbone_representation/1dtg_ss/1'/>
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<applet load='1dtg' size='400' frame='true' align='right' caption='1dtg' scene='Cartoon_backbone_representation/1dtg_ss/1'/>
Secondary structure refers to a protein's local three-dimensional structure, for example alpha helices and beta sheets are secondary structure. The structure on the right of a human transferrin n-lobe mutant (PDB code [[1dtg]]) is shown in cartoon backbone representation to highlight its secondary structure, with alpha-helices in magenta and beta-sheets in yellow.
Secondary structure refers to a protein's local three-dimensional structure, for example alpha helices and beta sheets are secondary structure. The structure on the right of a human transferrin n-lobe mutant (PDB code [[1dtg]]) is shown in cartoon backbone representation to highlight its secondary structure, with alpha-helices in magenta and beta-sheets in yellow.

Revision as of 18:55, 16 August 2008

1dtg

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Secondary structure refers to a protein's local three-dimensional structure, for example alpha helices and beta sheets are secondary structure. The structure on the right of a human transferrin n-lobe mutant (PDB code 1dtg) is shown in cartoon backbone representation to highlight its secondary structure, with alpha-helices in magenta and beta-sheets in yellow.

For more information, see Wikipedia's page on secondary structure.

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