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Revision as of 02:49, 20 September 2010
Welcome to Proteopedia,
The free, collaborative 3D encyclopedia of proteins & other molecules
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About • Editing • Help | Video Guide • Table of Contents • Content (Topic Pages) • What's New |
Exciting news!
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The Scientist "Labby Award" Winner
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Publish your Proteopedia Page in BAMBED
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Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry
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Proteopedia pages can now be submitted to the Journal of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education (BAMBED) for peer-review and publication. Submit your page and see the Sept/Oct edition of BAMBED. |
The Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry (JBIC) now publishes Interactive 3D Complements in Proteopedia for each of their macromolecular structure papers. See the first and the second such Interactive 3D Complements. |
Currently featured article
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Green links change the 3D image!
Click and drag on the molecule!
by Wayne Decatur
On October 7th, 2009 the Nobel Committee announced three structural biologists would share the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for studies of the 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 are both subunits of the ribosome, as well as that bind in the complex during the process of translation. Read more....
H1N1 Flu, Tamiflu & Neuraminidase were featured here earlier. See all previously featured articles...
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Browse
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Favorites
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Find my protein/molecule
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What's new?
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Want to contribute?
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Pages are easy to create and edit, and Green links are easy to make!
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Step 1
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Step 2
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Step 3
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Request an account. |
Get started with our narrated video guide, then use our editing-help page as a reference. |
Help expand existing pages like 1twc or Prion proteins; or start a new page on your favorite topic. We could use pages on DNA, Trypsin, & Myoglobin, among others. |
What can Proteopedia do for me?
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Scientists and Students
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Educators
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Structural researchers
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(You may protect your teaching pages from editing by others.) |
(You may protect such pages from editing by others or hide them from viewing pre-publication.) |
Read the paper
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Proteopedia - a scientific 'wiki' bridging the rift between 3D structure and function of biomacromolecules, Genome Biology 2008, 9:R121 doi:10.1186/gb-2008-9-8-r121 |
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