首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
About one third of all helices is terminated by residues with a positive torsion angle phi. 74% of them are glycines. This strong propensity can be explained by typical bifurcated three-center hydrogen bonds which are only compatible with a positive torsion angle phi, causing helix termination. An algorithm was developed to identify these structural features in alpha-helices. 158 out of 456 helices in 79 different well-refined protein structures examined in our analysis were found to have a glycine with this special conformation which have been conserved remarkably during evolution.  相似文献   

2.
Helix folding simulations with various initial conformations.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
S S Sung 《Biophysical journal》1994,66(6):1796-1803
Using a solvent-referenced energy calculation, a 16-residue peptide with alanine side chains folded into predominantly alpha-helical conformations during constant temperature (274 K) simulations. From different initial conformations, helical conformations were reached and the multiple energy minima did not become a serious problem. Under the same conditions, the simulation did not indiscriminately fold a sequence such as polyglycine into stable helices. Interesting observations from the simulations relate to the folding mechanism. The electrostatic interactions between the successive amides favored extended conformations (or beta strands) and caused energy barriers to helix folding. beta-bends were observed as intermediates during helix nucleation. The helix propagation toward the C-terminus seemed faster than that toward the N-terminus. In helical conformations, hydrogen bond oscillation between the i,i+ 4 and the i,i+3 patterns was observed. The i,i+3 hydrogen bonds occurred more frequently during helix propagation and deformation near both ends of the helical segment.  相似文献   

3.
Recent analysis of alpha helices in protein crystal structures, available in literature, revealed hydrated alpha helical segments in which, water molecule breaks open helix 5-->1 hydrogen bond by inserting itself, hydrogen bonds to both C=O and NH groups of helix hydrogen bond without disrupting the helix hydrogen bond, and hydrogen bonds to either C=O or NH of helix hydrogen bond. These hydrated segments display a variety of turn conformations and are thought to be 'folding intermediates' trapped during folding-unfolding of alpha helices. A role for reverse turns is implicated in the folding of alpha helices. We considered a hexapeptide model Ac-1TGAAKA6-NH2 from glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, corresponding to a hydrated helical segment to assess its role in helix folding. The sequence is a site for two 'folding intermediates'. The conformational features of the model peptide have been investigated by 1H 2D NMR techniques and quantum mechanical perturbative configuration interaction over localized orbitals (PCILO) method. Theoretical modeling largely correlates with experimental observations. Based upon the amide proton temperature coefficients, the observed d alpha n(i, i + 1), d alpha n(i, i + 2), dnn(i, i + 1), d beta n(i, i + 1) NOEs and the results from theoretical modeling, we conclude that the residues of the peptide sample alpha helical and neck regions of the Ramachandran phi, psi map with reduced conformational entropy and there is a potential for turn conformations at N and C terminal ends of the peptide. The role of reduced conformational entropy and turn potential in helix formation have been discussed. We conclude that the peptide sequence can serve as a 'folding intermediate' in the helix folding of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

4.
Helix capping.   总被引:12,自引:7,他引:5  
Helix-capping motifs are specific patterns of hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions found at or near the ends of helices in both proteins and peptides. In an alpha-helix, the first four >N-H groups and last four >C=O groups necessarily lack intrahelical hydrogen bonds. Instead, such groups are often capped by alternative hydrogen bond partners. This review enlarges our earlier hypothesis (Presta LG, Rose GD. 1988. Helix signals in proteins. Science 240:1632-1641) to include hydrophobic capping. A hydrophobic interaction that straddles the helix terminus is always associated with hydrogen-bonded capping. From a global survey among proteins of known structure, seven distinct capping motifs are identified-three at the helix N-terminus and four at the C-terminus. The consensus sequence patterns of these seven motifs, together with results from simple molecular modeling, are used to formulate useful rules of thumb for helix termination. Finally, we examine the role of helix capping as a bridge linking the conformation of secondary structure to supersecondary structure.  相似文献   

5.
Dasgupta B  Pal L  Basu G  Chakrabarti P 《Proteins》2004,55(2):305-315
Like the beta-turns, which are characterized by a limiting distance between residues two positions apart (i, i+3), a distance criterion (involving residues at positions i and i+4) is used here to identify alpha-turns from a database of known protein structures. At least 15 classes of alpha-turns have been enumerated based on the location in the phi,psi space of the three central residues (i+1 to i+3)-one of the major being the class AAA, where the residues occupy the conventional helical backbone torsion angles. However, moving towards the C-terminal end of the turn, there is a shift in the phi,psi angles towards more negative phi, such that the electrostatic repulsion between two consecutive carbonyl oxygen atoms is reduced. Except for the last position (i+4), there is not much similarity in residue composition at different positions of hydrogen and non-hydrogen bonded AAA turns. The presence or absence of Pro at i+1 position of alpha- and beta-turns has a bearing on whether the turn is hydrogen-bonded or without a hydrogen bond. In the tertiary structure, alpha-turns are more likely to be found in beta-hairpin loops. The residue composition at the beginning of the hydrogen bonded AAA alpha-turn has similarity with type I beta-turn and N-terminal positions of helices, but the last position matches with the C-terminal capping position of helices, suggesting that the existence of a "helix cap signal" at i+4 position prevents alpha-turns from growing into helices. Our results also provide new insights into alpha-helix nucleation and folding.  相似文献   

6.
H Gouda  H Torigoe  A Saito  M Sato  Y Arata  I Shimada 《Biochemistry》1992,31(40):9665-9672
The three-dimensional solution structure of the recombinant B domain (FB) of staphylococcal protein A, which specifically binds to the Fc portion of immunoglobulin G, was determined by NMR spectroscopy and hybrid distance geometry-dynamical simulated annealing calculations. On the basis of 692 experimental constraints including 587 distance constraints obtained from the nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE), 57 torsion angle (phi, chi 1) constraints, and 48 constraints associated with 24 hydrogen bonds, a total of 10 converged structures of FB were obtained. The atomic root mean square difference among the 10 converged structures is 0.52 +/- 0.10 A for the backbone atoms and 0.98 +/- 0.08 A for all heavy atoms (excluding the N-terminal segment from Thr1 to Glu9 and the C-terminal segment from Gln56 to Ala60, which are partially disordered). FB is composed of a bundle of three alpha-helices, i.e., helix I (Gln10-His19), helix II (Glu25-Asp37), and helix III (Ser42-Ala55). Helix II and helix III are antiparallel to each other, whereas the long axis of helix I is tilted at an angle of about 30 degrees with respect to those of helix II and helix III. Most of the hydrophobic residues of FB are buried in the interior of the bundle of the three helices. It is suggested that the buried hydrophobic residues form a hydrophobic core, contributing to the stability of FB.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The circular dichroism (CD) of cytochrome oxidase in solution indicates the presence of both alpha-helix (approximately 37%) and B-sheet (approximately 18%). In oriented films generated by the isopotential spin-dry method, the CD measured normal to the film shows a marked decrease in the negative bands at 222 and 208 nm, and a decrease and red shift in the positive band near 195 nm, relative to solution spectra. These features are characteristic of alpha-helices oriented with their helix axes along the direction of light propagation. A quantitative estimate of the orientation, based on the ratio of the rotational strengths of the 208-nm band in the film and in solution, leads to an average angle between the helix axis and the normal to the film, phi alpha of approximately 39 degrees. A method for analyzing infrared (IR) linear dichroism is developed that can be applied to proteins with comparable amounts of alpha-helix and beta-sheet. From analysis of the amide I band, phi alpha is found to lie between 20 and 36 degrees, depending on the angle that the amide I transition moment forms with the helix axis. A survey of the literature on the amide I transition moment direction indicates that a value of approximately 27 degrees is appropriate for standard alpha-helical systems, such as those in cytochrome oxidase. A larger value, near 40 degrees, is reasonable for systems that have distorted alpha-helices, as evidenced by amide I frequencies above 1,660 cm-1, as is the case of bacteriorhodopsin. This conclusion supports phi alpha approximately 36 degrees from IR linear dichroism, in agreement with the CD results. Linear dichroism in the amide I and amide II region indicates that the beta-sheet in cytochrome oxidase is oriented with the carbonyl groups nearly parallel to the plane of the membrane and the chain direction inclined at approximately 40 degrees to the normal. Comparison of these results with tentative identification of transmembrane helices from sequence data suggests that either some of the transmembrane helices are inclined at an unexpectedly large angle to the normal, or the number of such helices has been overestimated. Some putative transmembrane helices may be beta-strands spanning the membrane.  相似文献   

8.
Common structural elements in proteins such as α‐helices or β‐sheets are characterized by uniformly repeating, energetically favorable main chain conformations which additionally exhibit a completely saturated hydrogen‐bonding network of the main chain NH and CO groups. Although polyproline or polyglycine type II helices (PPII or PGII) are frequently found in proteins, they are not considered as equivalent secondary structure elements because they do not form a similar self‐contained hydrogen‐bonding network of the main chain atoms. In this context our finding of an unusual motif of glycine‐rich PGII‐like helices in the structure of the acetophenone carboxylase core complex is of relevance. These PGII‐like helices form hexagonal bundles which appear to fulfill the criterion of a (largely) saturated hydrogen‐bonding network of the main‐chain groups and therefore may be regarded in this sense as a new secondary structure element. It consists of a central PGII‐like helix surrounded by six nearly parallel PGII‐like helices in a hexagonal array, plus an additional PGII‐like helix extending the array outwards. Very related structural elements have previously been found in synthetic polyglycine fibers. In both cases, all main chain NH and CO groups of the central PGII‐helix are saturated by either intra‐ or intermolecular hydrogen‐bonds, resulting in a self‐contained hydrogen‐bonding network. Similar, but incomplete PGII‐helix patterns were also previously identified in a GTP‐binding protein and an antifreeze protein.  相似文献   

9.
Known sequence motifs containing key glycine residues can drive the homo-oligomerization of transmembrane helices. To find other motifs, a randomized library of transmembrane interfaces was generated in which glycine was omitted. The TOXCAT system, which measures transmembrane helix association in the Escherichia coli inner membrane, was used to select high-affinity homo-oligomerizing sequences in this library. The two most frequently occurring motifs were SxxSSxxT and SxxxSSxxT. Isosteric mutations of any one of the serine and threonine residues to non-polar residues abolished oligomerization, indicating that the interaction between these positions is specific and requires an extended motif of serine and threonine hydroxyl groups. Computational modeling of these sequences produced several chemically plausible structures that contain multiple hydrogen bonds between the serine and threonine residues. While single serine or threonine side-chains do not appear to promote helix association, motifs can drive strong and specific association through a cooperative network of interhelical hydrogen bonds.  相似文献   

10.
The nature and distribution of amino acids in the helix interfaces of four polytopic membrane proteins (cytochrome c oxidase, bacteriorhodopsin, the photosynthetic reaction center of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and the potassium channel of Streptomyces lividans) are studied to address the role of glycine in transmembrane helix packing. In contrast to soluble proteins where glycine is a noted helix breaker, the backbone dihedral angles of glycine in transmembrane helices largely fall in the standard alpha-helical region of a Ramachandran plot. An analysis of helix packing reveals that glycine residues in the transmembrane region of these proteins are predominantly oriented toward helix-helix interfaces and have a high occurrence at helix crossing points. Moreover, packing voids are generally not formed at the position of glycine in folded protein structures. This suggests that transmembrane glycine residues mediate helix-helix interactions in polytopic membrane proteins in a fashion similar to that seen in oligomers of membrane proteins with single membrane-spanning helices. The picture that emerges is one where glycine residues serve as molecular notches for orienting multiple helices in a folded protein complex.  相似文献   

11.
Collagen is the most abundant protein in animals. Every third residue in a collagen strand is a glycine with phi, psi = -70 degrees, 175 degrees. A recent computational study suggested that replacing these glycine residues with D-alanine or D-serine would stabilize the collagen triple helix. This hypothesis is of substantial importance, as the glycine residues in collagen constitute nearly 10% of the amino acid residues in humans. To test this hypothesis, we synthesized a series of collagen mimic peptides that contain one or more D-alanine or D-serine residues replacing the canonical glycine residues. Circular dichroism spectroscopy and thermal denaturation experiments indicated clearly that the substitution of glycine with D-alanine or D-serine greatly disfavors the formation of a triple helix. Host-guest studies also revealed that replacing a single glycine residue with D-alanine is more destabilizing than is its replacement with L-alanine, a substitution that results from a common mutation in patients with collagen-related diseases. These data indicate that the glycine residues in collagen are not a surrogate for a D-amino acid and support the notion that the main-chain torsion angles of a glycine residue in the native structure (especially, phi > 0 degrees ) are critical determinants for its beneficial substitution with a D-amino acid in a protein.  相似文献   

12.
Left-handed polyproline II helices (PPII) are contiguous elements of protein secondary structure in which the phi and psi angles of constituent residues are restricted to around -75 degrees and 145 degrees, respectively. They are important in structural proteins, in unfolded states and as ligands for signaling proteins. Here, we present a survey of 274 nonhomologous polypeptide chains from proteins of known structure for regions that form these structures. Such regions are rare, but the majority of proteins contain at least one PPII helix. Most PPII helices are shorter than five residues, although the longest found contained 12 amino acids. Proline predominates in PPII, but Gln and positively charged residues are also favored. The basis of Gln's prevalence is its ability to form an i, i + 1 side-chain to main-chain hydrogen bond with the backbone carbonyl oxygen of the proceeding residue; this helps to fix the psi angle of the Gln and the phi and psi of the proceeding residue in PPII conformations and explains why Gln is favored at the first position in a PPII helix. PPII helices are highly solvent exposed, which explains why apolar amino acids are disfavored despite preferring this region of phi/psi space when in isolation. PPII helices have perfect threefold rotational symmetry and within these structures we find significant correlation between the hydrophobicity of residues at i and i + 3; thus, PPII helices in globular proteins can be considered to be amphipathic.  相似文献   

13.
The crystal structure of beta-D-glucopyranosyl-(1-->4)-alpha-D-glucopyranose (alpha-cellobiose) in a complex with water and NaI was determined with Mo K(alpha) radiation at 150 K to R=0.027. The space group is P2(1) and unit cell dimensions are a=9.0188, b=12.2536, c=10.9016 A, beta=97.162 degrees. There are no direct hydrogen bonds among cellobiose molecules, and the usual intramolecular hydrogen bond between O-3 and O-5' is replaced by a bridge involving Na+, O-3, O-5', and O-6'. Both Na+ have sixfold coordination. One I(-) accepts six donor hydroxyl groups and three C-H***I(-) hydrogen bonds. The other accepts three hydroxyls, one Na+, and five C-H***I(-) hydrogen bonds. Linkage torsion angles phi(O-5) and psi(C-5) are -73.6 and -105.3 degrees, respectively (phi(H)=47.1 degrees and psi(H)=14.6 degrees ), probably induced by the Na+ bridge. This conformation is in a separate cluster in phi,psi space from most similar linkages. Both C-6-O-H and C-6'-O-H are gg, while the C-6'-O-H groups from molecules not in the cluster have gt conformations. Hybrid molecular mechanics/quantum mechanics calculations show <1.2 kcal/mol strain for any of the small-molecule structures. Extrapolation of the NaI cellobiose geometry to a cellulose molecule gives a left-handed helix with 2.9 residues per turn. The energy map and small-molecule crystal structures imply that cellulose helices having 2.5 and 3.0 residues per turn are left-handed.  相似文献   

14.
Kim S  Cross TA 《Biophysical journal》2002,83(4):2084-2095
Protein environments substantially influence the balance of molecular interactions that generate structural stability. Transmembrane helices exist in the relatively uniform low dielectric interstices of the lipid bilayer, largely devoid of water and with a very hydrophobic distribution of amino acid residues. Here, through an analysis of bacteriorhodopsin crystal structures and the transmembrane helix structure from M2 protein of influenza A, some helices are shown to be exceptionally uniform in hydrogen bond geometry, peptide plane tilt angle, and backbone torsion angles. Evidence from both the x-ray crystal structures and solid-state NMR structure suggests that the intramolecular backbone hydrogen bonds are shorter than their counterparts in water-soluble proteins. Moreover, the geometry is consistent with a dominance of electrostatic versus covalent contributions to these bonds. A comparison of structure as a function of resolution shows that as the structures become better characterized the helices become much more uniform, suggesting that there is a possibility that many more uniform helices will be observed, even among the moderate resolution membrane protein structures that are currently in the Protein Data Bank that do not show such features.  相似文献   

15.
Liu W  Crocker E  Zhang W  Elliott JI  Luy B  Li H  Aimoto S  Smith SO 《Biochemistry》2005,44(9):3591-3597
Amyloid fibrils associated with diseases such as Alzheimer's are often derived from the transmembrane helices of membrane proteins. It is known that the fibrils have a cross-beta-sheet structure where main chain hydrogen bonding occurs between beta-strands in the direction of the fibril axis. However, the structural basis for how the membrane-spanning helix is converted into a beta-sheet or how protofibrils associate into fibrils is not known. Here, we use a model peptide corresponding to a portion of the single transmembrane helix of glycophorin A to investigate the structural role of glycine in amyloid-like fibrils formed from transmembrane helices. Glycophorin A contains a GxxxG motif that is found in many transmembrane sequences including that of the amyloid precursor protein and prion protein. We propose that glycine, which mediates helix interactions in membrane proteins, also provides key packing motifs when it occurs in beta-sheets. We show that glycines in the glycophorin A transmembrane helix promote extended beta-strand formation when the helix partitions into aqueous environments and stabilize the packing of beta-sheets in the formation of amyloid-like fibrils. We demonstrate that fibrillization can be disrupted with a new class of inhibitors that target the molecular grooves created by glycine.  相似文献   

16.
The solution structure of recombinant human thioredoxin (105 residues) has been determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy combined with hybrid distance geometry-dynamical simulated annealing calculations. Approximate interproton distance restraints were derived from nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) measurements. In addition, a large number of stereospecific assignments for beta-methylene protons and torsion angle restraints for phi, psi, and chi 1 were obtained by using a conformational grid search on the basis of the intraresidue and sequential NOE data in conjunction with 3JHN alpha and 3J alpha beta coupling constants. The structure calculations were based on 1983 approximate interproton distance restraints, 52 hydrogen-bonding restraints for 26 hydrogen bonds, and 98 phi, 71 psi, and 72 chi 1 torsion angle restraints. The 33 final simulated annealing structures obtained had an average atomic rms distribution of the individual structures about the mean coordinate positions of 0.40 +/- 0.06 A for the backbone atoms and 0.78 +/- 0.05 A for all atoms. The solution structure of human thioredoxin consists of a five-stranded beta-sheet surrounded by four alpha-helices, with an active site protrusion containing the two redox-active cysteines. The overall structure is similar to the crystal and NMR structures of oxidized [Katti, S. K., LeMaster, D. M., & Eklund, H. (1990) J. Mol. Biol. 212, 167-184] and reduced [Dyson, J. H., Gippert, G. P., Case, D. A., Holmgren, A., & Wright, P. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 4129-4136] Escherichia coli thioredoxin, respectively, despite the moderate 25% amino acid sequence homology. Several differences, however, can be noted. The human alpha 1 helix is a full turn longer than the corresponding helix in E. coli thioredoxin and is characterized by a more regular helical geometry. The helix labeled alpha 3 in human thioredoxin has its counterpart in the 3(10) helix of the E. coli protein and is also longer in the human protein. In contrast to these structural differences, the conformation of the active site loop in both proteins is very similar, reflecting the perfect sequence identity for a stretch of eight amino acid residues around the redox-active cysteines.  相似文献   

17.
There are many kinds of silks from silkworms and spiders with different structures and properties, and thus, silks are suitable to study the structure-property relationship of fibrous proteins. Silk fibroin from a wild silkworm, Samia cynthia ricini, mainly consists of the repeated similar sequences by about 100 times where there are alternative appearances of the polyalanine (Ala)(12-13) region and the Gly-rich region. In this paper, a sequential model peptide, GGAGGGYGGDGG(A)(12)GGAGDGYGAG, which is a typical sequence of the silk fibroin, was synthesized, and the atomic-level conformations of Gly residues at the N- and C-terminal ends of the polyalanine region were determined as well as that of the central Ala residue using (13)C 2D spin diffusion solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) under off-magic angle spinning. In the model peptide with alpha-helical conformation, the torsion angle of the central Ala residue, the 19th Ala, was determined to be (phi, psi) = (-60 degrees, -50 degrees ), which was a typical alpha-helical structure, but the torsion angles of two Gly residues, the 12th and 25th Gly residues, which are located at the N- and C-terminal ends of the polyalanine region, were determined to be (phi, psi) = (-70 degrees, -30 degrees ) and (phi, psi) = (-70 degrees, -20 degrees ), respectively. Thus, it was observed that the turns at both ends of polyalanine with alpha-helix conformation in the model peptide are tightly wound.  相似文献   

18.
Helix geometry in proteins   总被引:39,自引:0,他引:39  
In this report we describe a general survey of all helices found in 57 of the known protein crystal structures, together with a detailed analysis of 48 alpha-helices found in 16 of the structures that are determined to high resolution. The survey of all helices reveals a total of 291 alpha-helices, 71 3(10)-helices and no examples of pi-helices. The conformations of the observed helices are significantly different from the "ideal" linear structures. The mean phi, psi angles for the alpha- and 3(10)-helices found in proteins are, respectively, (-62 degrees, -41 degrees) and (-71 degrees, -18 degrees). A computer program, HBEND, is used to characterize and to quantify the different types of helix distortion. alpha-Helices are classified as regular or irregular, linear, curved or kinked. Of the 48 alpha-helices analysed, only 15% are considered to be linear; 17% are kinked, and 58% are curved. The curvature of helices is caused by differences in the peptide hydrogen bonding on opposite faces of the helix, reflecting carbonyl-solvent/side-chain interactions for the exposed residues, and packing constraints for residues involved in the hydrophobic core. Kinked helices arise either as a result of included proline residues, or because of conflicting requirements for the optimal packing of the helix side-chains. In alpha-helices where there are kinks caused by proline residues, we show that the angle of kink is relatively constant (approximately 26 degrees), and that there is minimal disruption of the helix hydrogen bonding. The proline residues responsible for the kinks are highly conserved, suggesting that these distortions may be structurally/functionally important.  相似文献   

19.
The 3(10)-helix is characterized by having at least two consecutive hydrogen bonds between the main-chain carbonyl oxygen of residue i and the main-chain amide hydrogen of residue i + 3. The helical parameters--pitch, residues per turn, radius, and root mean square deviation (rmsd) from the best-fit helix--were determined by using the HELFIT program. All 3(10)-helices were classified as regular or irregular based on rmsd/(N - 1)1/2 where N is the helix length. For both there are systematic, position-specific shifts in the backbone dihedral angles. The average phi, psi shift systematically from approximately -58 degrees, approximately -32 degrees to approximately -90 degrees, approximately -4 degrees for helices 5, 6, and 7 residues long. The same general pattern is seen for helices, N = 8 and 9; however, in N = 9, the trend is repeated with residues 6, 7, and 8 approximately repeating the phi, psi of residues 2, 3, and 4. The residues per turn and radius of regular 3(10)-helices decrease with increasing length of helix, while the helix pitch and rise per residue increase. That is, regular 3(10)-helices become thinner and longer as N increases from 5 to 8. The fraction of regular 3(10)-helices decreases linearly with helix length. All longer helices, N > or = 9 are irregular. Energy minimizations show that regular helices become less stable with increasing helix length. These findings indicate that the definition of 3(10)-helices in terms of average, uniform dihedral angles is not appropriate and that it is inherently unstable for a polypeptide to form an extended, regular 3(10)-helix. The 3(10)-helices observed in proteins are better referred to parahelices.  相似文献   

20.
It has been proposed that combination of intraresidue, sequential and longer range nuclear Overhauser enhancements occurring in 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of protein chains folded in a helix show a regular characteristic pattern. As a test case the spectra of horse muscle acylphosphatase were searched for this pattern together with other typical signs of a helical conformation (i.e. chemical shift, coupling constants and slow 2H-H exchange). Two amino acid sequences complying with these requirements were found. Just a few amino acid spin system assignments were then sufficient to locate the two segments within the primary structure (residues 22 to 35 and 55 to 66), thus providing the sequential assignment. The assignment of the side-chains was completed and a list of all nuclear magnetic resonance constraints within the two segments (126 intra- and 180 interresidue distances, 21 torsion angles phi and 19 hydrogen bonds) was produced. Distance geometry calculation shows that each segment forms an alpha-helix. The mutual orientation of the two helices was established subsequently.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号