Difference between revisions of "Lecture 10"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 95: | Line 95: | ||
]] | ]] | ||
======Slide 015====== | ======Slide 015====== | ||
− | + | <small>omitted</small> | |
− | + | ||
− | |||
======Slide 016====== | ======Slide 016====== | ||
[[Image:10_slide016.jpg|frame|none|Lecture 10, Slide 016<br> | [[Image:10_slide016.jpg|frame|none|Lecture 10, Slide 016<br> |
Latest revision as of 14:51, 10 December 2007
(Previous lecture) ... (Next lecture)
Interpreting Protein Structure
Objectives for this part of the course
- Understand that PDB files contain coordinate information, measured in an orthogonal coordinate system in Å (0.1 nm, 10-10m ).
- Have a sense of the approximate sizes of biological objects.
- Be familiar with the most frequently recurring conformations in protein structure.
- Be aware that these recurring units are just labels and there is some degree of arbitrariness involved in assigning them to real coordinates.
- Understand that more frequently observed conformations are more favourable - for function, for stability or both.
- Be able to superimpose two structures and compare their differences.
- Be able to find structures that are similar to a query.
Links summary
- Backbone Dependent Rotamer Library
- Atlas of Hydrogen Bonds
- Structural Alignment (Wikipedia)
- VAST at the NCBI
- DALI fold classification in Helsinki
- HOMSTRAD at the University of Cambridge
- List of Structural Alignment Software (Wikipedia)
Lecture slides
Analysis of coordinate geometry
Slide 006
Slide 007
Slide 008
Slide 009
Slide 010
Slide 011
Slide 012
Slide 015
omitted
Slide 016
Slide 017
Slide 018
Slide 019
Slide 020
Slide 022
Structure contains recurring units
Slide 024
Slide 031
Slide 032
Slide 033
Slide 034
Slide 035
Slide 036
Slide 037
Slide 038
Slide 039
Slide 040
Slide 041
Propensity predicts stability
Slide 043
Slide 044
Methods: RMSD and superposition
Slide 046
Slide 047
Slide 048
Slide 049
Slide 050
Slide 052
Structural knowledge - mechanistic explanations
Slide 068