Helices in Proteins: Difference between revisions
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All are decapeptide segments extracted from actual protein structures in the PDB. They are shown using the same scale, for a better comparison (as a consequence, zoom in the Jmol applets is disabled). | All are decapeptide segments extracted from actual protein structures in the PDB. They are shown using the same scale, for a better comparison (as a consequence, zoom in the Jmol applets is disabled). | ||
<jmol> | <span style="font-size:150%"><jmol> | ||
<jmolCheckbox> | <jmolCheckbox> | ||
<target>all</target> | <target>all</target> | ||
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</jmolCheckbox> | </jmolCheckbox> | ||
</jmol> | </jmol> | ||
<table style="width:100%;"> | <table style="width:100%;"></span> | ||
<tr align="center"> | <tr align="center"> | ||
<th style="width:33%;">3<sub>10</sub> helix | <th style="width:33%;">3<sub>10</sub> helix |
Revision as of 21:39, 11 April 2011
Helical conformations in proteinsHelical conformations in proteins
This page illustrates the 3 most common helical conformations (secondary structures) found in proteins.
All are decapeptide segments extracted from actual protein structures in the PDB. They are shown using the same scale, for a better comparison (as a consequence, zoom in the Jmol applets is disabled).
310 helix | alpha helix | pi helix | ||||||||||||||||||
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310
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3.613
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4.416
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