3ebx
REFINEMENT AT 1.4 ANGSTROMS RESOLUTION OF A MODEL OF ERABUTOXIN B. TREATMENT OF ORDERED SOLVENT AND DISCRETE DISORDERREFINEMENT AT 1.4 ANGSTROMS RESOLUTION OF A MODEL OF ERABUTOXIN B. TREATMENT OF ORDERED SOLVENT AND DISCRETE DISORDER
Structural highlights
Function[NXSB_PSSEM] Binds with high affinity to muscular nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs), and with low affinity to neuronal alpha-7 nAChRs and inhibit acetylcholine from binding to the receptor, thereby impairing neuromuscular transmission. Produces peripheral paralysis by blocking neuromuscular transmission at the postsynaptic site.[1] Evolutionary Conservation![]() Check, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedThe latter stages in the refinement of the protein erabutoxin b are described. The crystal structure of the 62-residue protein has been refined to a conventional R factor of 0.144 by stereochemically restrained least-squares methods using diffraction data to a limit of 1.4 A spacings. Emphasis was placed on determining as accurately as possible the solvent structure and the structures of heterogeneous groups in the protein. The final model includes two conformers for each of seven side chains and for an octapeptide segment. A total of 111 sites for water molecules have been located as well as one sulfate ion with a total of 68 site occupancies. 65 of the solvent sites overlap either with protein atoms belonging to groups in two alternative conformations or with other solvent sites. Dual protein conformers and overlapping solvent sites were both included in the least-squares refinement. Individual thermal and occupancy parameters were refined for solvent molecules. An analysis of these parameters has provided useful structural information. Refinement at 1.4 A resolution of a model of erabutoxin b: treatment of ordered solvent and discrete disorder.,Smith JL, Corfield PW, Hendrickson WA, Low BW Acta Crystallogr A. 1988 May 1;44 ( Pt 3):357-68. PMID:3272151[2] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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