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Post-translation
Post-translation

... University of California Irvine, CA, USA ...
Substances required for living processes
Substances required for living processes

... Like carbohydrates, they are used as an energy supply, but a given amount of lipid release more energy than the same amount of carbohydrate. Due to their insolubility in water and compact structure, lipids have long-term storage qualities. Adipose cells beneath our skin contain large quantities of f ...
1 - Rosshall Academy
1 - Rosshall Academy

... acids and glycerol in the ratio of three moles of fatty acid to one mole of glycerol. Proteins ...
Bioknowlodgy worksheet 2.4
Bioknowlodgy worksheet 2.4

... Draw and annotate a structural diagram below to outline how two generalised amino acids (i.e. use the R-group nomenclature) into a dipeptide through condensation, producing a peptide bond. ...
KU Powerpoint
KU Powerpoint

... to begin the process of building up muscle fibers  A snack rich in both protein and carbohydrate eaten directly after exercise may help in this regard ...
Protein Synthesis
Protein Synthesis

... then carried to the cytoplasm • A ribosome attaches to the mRNA. • The instructions carried by the mRNA will be used to assemble the amino acids in the proper order ...
If we are composed of cells, what are cells made of? Building Blocks
If we are composed of cells, what are cells made of? Building Blocks

... Enzymes have an active site (where reactions occur) *The SHAPE of the active site determines which substrates will bind to it.* Different enzymes act on specific subtrates. Most enzymes are proteins. A change in temp. and pH can change a proteins shapeit won’t work well or at all. ...
Macromolecules
Macromolecules

... Man-made runoff through canals into drinking water ...
Branched Chain Amino Acid
Branched Chain Amino Acid

... •  Amino acids are the building blocks of protein and there are three specific essential amino acids that make up as much as 33 percent of skeletal muscle. •  These amino acids are known as the branched chain amino acids (BCAAs) and they include, valine, leucine and isoleucine. •  Valine is necessar ...
Poster Link
Poster Link

... organizing results obtained after primers are generated. The software allows the user to examine multiple primers at once and to adjust primer lengths. Once the primers are generated, lab tests are performed on the primers and the results are entered into a database. The database can be queried to f ...
A new strategy for quantitative proteomics using isotope
A new strategy for quantitative proteomics using isotope

... identification. Although this method is well established, quantitative determination is not accurate and the reproducibility of the 2D-gels is very poor. Recent developments, like the ICAT reagent [1] or GIST [2] methodology have shown to be powerful alternatives to comparative 2D gel imaging analys ...
LabM3bioinformatics
LabM3bioinformatics

...  Computational tools were developed to integrate the information in new types of web resources.  By using these web sites, the molecular cell biologists throughout the world enter the Different databases as genebank, protein database (PDB) etc.. (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) ...
cell - Zoology, UBC
cell - Zoology, UBC

... In pure water, some of the H2O molecules will dissociate into H+ and OHThe H+ concentration in pure water is 0.1 mM, or 1x10-7 moles/L (hence pH 7) ...
Amino Acid Alphabet
Amino Acid Alphabet

... Binary patterning Is it possible to design a protein by specifying just its hydrophobicity pattern without the amino acid identities? The hydrophobicity pattern on a helix repeats itself roughly every 3.6 amino acids. Test if a randomized peptide with the hydrophobicity pattern of a helix actually ...
Madhavi_11072005
Madhavi_11072005

... KchannelDB, the database of Kchannel proteins subdiviided into families of 1, 2, 4 and 6 TMs each has been collected and processed. First 2 have been evaluated. Decision tree and support vector machine classifiers have been ...
Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV)
Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV)

Health and Wellness
Health and Wellness

Hot Topics in Protein Medicinal Chemistry
Hot Topics in Protein Medicinal Chemistry

... “Non-Canonical Amino Acids as Tools for Protein Medicinal Chemistry” ...
SQUADS #4
SQUADS #4

... #6. Suppose proteins are almost completely denatured and then allowed to renature in a way that allows them to have their lowest-energy shapes. Which of the following statements about the proteins is most consistent with the information presented in the passage? A. If Scientist 1 is correct, all of ...
Contractile Proteins - Mrs. DeNicola's Science Corner
Contractile Proteins - Mrs. DeNicola's Science Corner

... -They are part of what makes up our muscle fibers, along with regulatory and structural proteins -The types of contractile proteins that are in muscle fibers are actin, which is part of thin filament, and myosin, which is part of thick filament ...
Basic Biochemistry - Personal Webspace for QMUL
Basic Biochemistry - Personal Webspace for QMUL

... pH when the net surface charge is ZERO for that protein  Isoelectric Focusing  This technique requires a pH gradient gel  It uses a gel of polyampholytes  Polyampholytes are small multi-charged polymers with different values of pI  Applying an electric field to this gel creates the pH gradient ...
Viral Structure Lec. 2
Viral Structure Lec. 2

11046_2011_9445_MOESM6_ESM
11046_2011_9445_MOESM6_ESM

... The bar diagram shows percentage of differentially expressed genes in various functional classes of A. fumigatus treated with artemisinin. The functional classes such as ubiquitin-dependent protein degradation, transport proteins, cell stress, carbohydrate metabolism, translation, progression of cel ...
Protocol S1.
Protocol S1.

... SCHEMA a small number of chimera and (ii) in reason of the small length of sequence available with structural data, these analyses lack statistical basis and could only be used as a raw indication of how recombination cause protein misfolding. To circumvent this problem, we performed the same analys ...
BIOACTIVE PROTEINS
BIOACTIVE PROTEINS

... Molecular weight ...
< 1 ... 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 ... 202 >

Intrinsically disordered proteins



An intrinsically disordered protein (IDP) is a protein that lacks a fixed or ordered three-dimensional structure. IDPs cover a spectrum of states from fully unstructured to partially structured and include random coils, (pre-)molten globules, and large multi-domain proteins connected by flexible linkers. They constitute one of the main types of protein (alongside globular, fibrous and membrane proteins).The discovery of IDPs has challenged the traditional protein structure paradigm, that protein function depends on a fixed three-dimensional structure. This dogma has been challenged over the last decades by increasing evidence from various branches of structural biology, suggesting that protein dynamics may be highly relevant for such systems. Despite their lack of stable structure, IDPs are a very large and functionally important class of proteins. In some cases, IDPs can adopt a fixed three-dimensional structure after binding to other macromolecules.
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