Sandbox Reserved 1654

From Proteopedia

Revision as of 18:01, 3 January 2021 by Sarah Stadnik (Talk | contribs)
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This Sandbox is Reserved from 26/11/2020, through 26/11/2021 for use in the course "Structural Biology" taught by Bruno Kieffer at the University of Strasbourg, ESBS. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1643 through Sandbox Reserved 1664.
To get started:
  • Click the edit this page tab at the top. Save the page after each step, then edit it again.
  • Click the 3D button (when editing, above the wikitext box) to insert Jmol.
  • show the Scene authoring tools, create a molecular scene, and save it. Copy the green link into the page.
  • Add a description of your scene. Use the buttons above the wikitext box for bold, italics, links, headlines, etc.

More help: Help:Editing

Contents

Cytplasmic Polyadenylation Element-binding Protein (CPEB)

You may include any references to papers as in: the use of JSmol in Proteopedia [1] or to the article describing Jmol [2] to the rescue.

Structure

All CPEB proteins have a similar structure : A N-terminal and a C-terminal region. The C-terminal region is composed of 2 recognition patterns (RRMs), which allow a good positioning of RNA, a high fidelity and are essential for the CPE specific recognition and of 2 zinc finger patterns, containing a specific RNA-binding protein sequence which play a role in affinity but not in specificity. The N-terminal region is a regulatory region with phosphorylation and dephosphorylation sites. This region is variable in length and composition.

Caption for this structure

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Function

Disease

This is a sample scene created with SAT to by Group, and another to make of the protein. You can make your own scenes on SAT starting from scratch or loading and editing one of these sample scenes.

References

  1. Hanson, R. M., Prilusky, J., Renjian, Z., Nakane, T. and Sussman, J. L. (2013), JSmol and the Next-Generation Web-Based Representation of 3D Molecular Structure as Applied to Proteopedia. Isr. J. Chem., 53:207-216. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijch.201300024
  2. Herraez A. Biomolecules in the computer: Jmol to the rescue. Biochem Mol Biol Educ. 2006 Jul;34(4):255-61. doi: 10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644. PMID:21638687 doi:10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644
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