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| <div style="font-size:120%" align="left">Currently featured article</div>
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| <slideshow sequence="random" transition="fade" refresh="1000"> | | <slideshow sequence="random" transition="fade" refresh="5000"> |
| <div>[[Image:2plc.png|center|thumb|200px|]] </div> | | <div>[[Image:Searchable3dzy2.png|center|thumb|300px|Crystal Structure of [[Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors]]]] </div> |
| <div>[[Image:2plc.png|center|thumb|200px| asdfasdfasdfasdf]]</div> | | <div>[[Image:Searchable1dqa opening.png|center|thumb|300px|Crystal Structure of [[HMG-CoA Reductase]]]] </div> |
| <div>[[Image:2plc.png|thumb|center|200px|(-)-Huperzine A (HupA) is found in an extract from a club moss that has been used for centuries in Chinese folk medicine. Its action has been attributed to its ability to strongly inhibit acetylcholinesterase (AChE) [[1v04]]]]</div> | | <div>[[Image:SearchableVEGF Opening.png|center|thumb|300px|Crystal Structure of [[Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor]]]] </div> |
| </slideshow> | | <div>[[Image:SearchableVEGFR Opening.png|center|thumb|300px|Crystal Structure of [[Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor]]]] </div> |
| </td> | | <div>[[Image:Searchable800px-Opening 1igt.png|center|thumb|300px|Crystal Structure of an [[Antibody]]]]</div> |
| | <div>[[Image:SearchableTPI1 structure.png|thumb|center|300px|Crystal Structure of [[Triose Phosphate Isomerase]]]] </div> |
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| <div style="font-size:130%; line-height:2.0em"><span style="color:green" align="center">Green</span> links change the 3D image! | | <big> At the left are high quality pages created within the last couple weeks. '''Click on the the image''' or the link below the image for additional information about the protein. This area highlights the best newly created pages, and is updated frequently to provide users with new material. For additional new pages, see: [[Proteopedia:What's New|What's New]]</big> |
| Click and drag on the molecule!</div>
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| <div style="font-size:200%; line-height:2.0em">[[Ribosome|The Ribosome]]</div>by [[User:Wayne_Decatur|Wayne Decatur]]
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| On October 7th, 2009 the Nobel Committee announced three structural biologists would share [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/2009/ the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry] for studies of the [[Ribosome|The Ribosome]]. The ribosome is the machine in your cells that accurately and efficiently decodes the genetic information stored in your genome and synthesizes the corresponding polypeptide chain one amino acid at a time in the process of translation. Venkatraman Ramakrishnan of the M.R.C. Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, England; Thomas A. Steitz of Yale University; and Ada E. Yonath of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel share the prize for the first atomic-resolution structures of the two subunits that come together to form an active ribosome. These structures are considered landmarks for the fact they showed clearly the major contributions to decoding and peptide bond synthesis come from RNA and not protein, as well as for the sheer size of the structures determined. These structures represent tour-de-force efforts in understanding fundamental processes in every organism on earth and will have direct impacts on how we fight pathogenic bacteria in the immediate future. Shown <scene name='User:Wayne_Decatur/SandboxRibosome/Bothmodels6black/1'>here (restore initial scene)</scene> are both subunits of the ribosome, as well as <scene name='User:Wayne_Decatur/SandboxRibosome/Trnamrnablack/1'>mRNA and tRNA</scene> that bind in the complex during the process of translation. [[Ribosome|Read more...]].
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| <div align="right">[[Avian Influenza Neuraminidase, Tamiflu and Relenza |H1N1 Flu, Tamiflu & Neuraminidase]] were featured here earlier. See [[Proteopedia:Featured article archives|all previously featured articles...]]</div>
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