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A piece of string, or a protein chain, is deemed to contain a knot when pulling on the ends would leave a knot. When the ends of most folded protein chains are "pulled", they resolve to a straight chain between the pulled ends: no knot remains. Knots in protein chains are rare, and the mechanisms by which they form and their functions remain subjects of speculation. A dramatic example, discovered in 2000, is illustrated here.
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A piece of string, or a protein chain, is deemed to contain a knot when pulling on the ends would leave a knot. When the ends of most folded protein chains are "pulled", they resolve to a straight chain between the pulled ends: no knot remains. Knots in protein chains are rare, and the mechanisms by which they form and their functions remain subjects of speculation<ref name="taylor2000">PMID: 10972297</ref>. A dramatic example, discovered in 2000<ref name="taylor2000" />, is illustrated here.
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noncovalent pseudoknots <ref name="pseudoknots">PMID: 12798035</ref>
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==Notes & References==
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<references />

Revision as of 00:14, 1 September 2009

Proposed Article Title: Knots in Proteins

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A piece of string, or a protein chain, is deemed to contain a knot when pulling on the ends would leave a knot. When the ends of most folded protein chains are "pulled", they resolve to a straight chain between the pulled ends: no knot remains. Knots in protein chains are rare, and the mechanisms by which they form and their functions remain subjects of speculation[1]. A dramatic example, discovered in 2000[1], is illustrated here.

noncovalent pseudoknots [2]

Notes & References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Taylor WR. A deeply knotted protein structure and how it might fold. Nature. 2000 Aug 24;406(6798):916-9. PMID:10972297 doi:10.1038/35022623
  2. Taylor WR, Xiao B, Gamblin SJ, Lin K. A knot or not a knot? SETting the record 'straight' on proteins. Comput Biol Chem. 2003 Feb;27(1):11-5. PMID:12798035

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Eric Martz, Eran Hodis

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