User:Mary Ball/Leptin

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Leptin is the name given to the protein coded by the gene identified as being mutated in the mouse phenotype named "obese."


Mutations in the obese gene (OB) or in the gene encoding the OB receptor(OB-R) result in obesity, infertility and diabetes in a variety of mouse phenotypes. The demonstration that OB protein (also known as leptin) can normalize body weight in ob/ob mice has generated enormous interest. Most human obesity does not appear to result from a mutant form of leptin: rather, serum leptin concentrations are increased and there is an apparent inability to transport it to the central nervous system (CNS). Injection of leptin into the CNS of overfed rodents resistant to peripheral administration was found to induce biological activity. Consequently, for the leptin to act as a weight-lowering hormone in human obesity, it appears that appropriate concentrations must be present in the CNS. This places a premium on understanding the structure of the hormone in order to design more potent and selective agonists.

1. It is legal to contest a 'Pick' call.

true
false
The 11th edition explicitly acknowledges that any infraction can be contested - see XVI.B

2. A defensive player is marking an offensive player with the disc. The defensive player gets to 'Five' in the stall count when the offensive player calls out 'disc space'. The defensive player agrees with the call and should :

step back and continue counting from 'One'
step back and continue counting from 'Four'
step back and continue counting from 'Five'
step back and continue counting from 'Six'
see section XIV.B.3 and XIV.B.7 - "When a marking violation is called, play does not stop. The violation must be corrected before the marker can resume the stall count with the number last uttered before the call minus one".

3.

Name a famous Greek philosopher.

4. Question

Correct answer.
Incorrect answer.
Correct answer.
Incorrect answer.

5. Which of these structures are Complexed with Tacrine?

1zgb

Your score is 0 / 0



PDB ID 1ax8

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
1ax8, resolution 2.40Å ()
Gene: OBESE GENE (Homo sapiens)
Resources: FirstGlance, OCA, RCSB, PDBsum
Coordinates: save as pdb, mmCIF, xml



HUMAN OBESITY PROTEIN, LEPTIN

Publication Abstract from PubMed

Mutations in the obese gene (OB) or in the gene encoding the OB receptor(OB-R) result in obesity, infertility and diabetes in a variety of mouse phenotypes. The demonstration that OB protein (also known as leptin) can normalize body weight in ob/ob mice has generated enormous interest. Most human obesity does not appear to result from a mutant form of leptin: rather, serum leptin concentrations are increased and there is an apparent inability to transport it to the central nervous system (CNS). Injection of leptin into the CNS of overfed rodents resistant to peripheral administration was found to induce biological activity. Consequently, for the leptin to act as a weight-lowering hormone in human obesity, it appears that appropriate concentrations must be present in the CNS. This places a premium on understanding the structure of the hormone in order to design more potent and selective agonists. Here we report the crystal structure at 2.4A resolution of a human mutant OB protein (leptin-E100) that has comparable biological activity to wild type but which crystallizes more readily. The structure reveals a four-helix bundle similar to that of the long-chain helical cytokine family.

Crystal structure of the obese protein leptin-E100., Zhang F, Basinski MB, Beals JM, Briggs SL, Churgay LM, Clawson DK, DiMarchi RD, Furman TC, Hale JE, Hsiung HM, Schoner BE, Smith DP, Zhang XY, Wery JP, Schevitz RW, Nature. 1997 May 8;387(6629):206-9. PMID:9144295

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

About this Structure

1AX8 is a 1 chain structure of sequence from Homo sapiens. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

  • Zhang F, Basinski MB, Beals JM, Briggs SL, Churgay LM, Clawson DK, DiMarchi RD, Furman TC, Hale JE, Hsiung HM, Schoner BE, Smith DP, Zhang XY, Wery JP, Schevitz RW. Crystal structure of the obese protein leptin-E100. Nature. 1997 May 8;387(6629):206-9. PMID:9144295 doi:10.1038/387206a0

Page seeded by OCA on Tue Feb 17 06:36:47 2009

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Mary Ball, Jaime Prilusky, Michal Harel, Eran Hodis

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