Highest impact structures: Difference between revisions

From Proteopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Eric Martz (talk | contribs)
New page: ==Highest Impact Structures of All Time== Below you are invited to list pages about structures that you believe to be among the highest impact since the first empirical macromolecular str...
 
Eric Martz (talk | contribs)
creating page
Line 1: Line 1:
==Highest Impact Structures of All Time==
==Highest Impact Structures of All Time==


Below you are invited to list pages about structures that you believe to be among the highest impact since the first empirical macromolecular structures were determined. Please do not list a structure unless you provide a justification in the form of a brief description of its impact.
Below you are invited to list pages about structures that you believe to be among the highest impact since the first empirical macromolecular structures were determined. Please do '''not''' list a structure unless you ''provide a justification in the form of a brief description of its impact''.  


* 1958: Myoglobin: As the first protein structure that was determined, it is hard to exaggerate its impact. Before this structure, there was very little understanding of protein structure.
: More about some of the earliest structures and their PDB files is [http://www.umass.edu/microbio/rasmol/1st_xtls.htm here].
 
* 1953 - DNA double helix (B form): Although Watson and Crick's model was theoretical, it was correct, and for the first time explained the ability of genes to be faithfully copied during cell division. It was not confirmed by atomic resolution X-ray crystallography until 1973, using RNA dinucleotide crystals. A full turn of B form DNA was not solved until 1980 (cf. [[1bna]]), 27 years after Watson and Crick's model. More: click on DNA at [http://atlas.molviz.org]
 
* 1958 - Myoglobin: As the first protein structure that was determined, it is hard to exaggerate its impact. Before this structure, there was very little understanding of 3D protein structure.
 
* 1965 - Lysozyme: The first enzyme solved.
 
* 1974 - Transfer RNA: The first 3D RNA structure solved.

Revision as of 07:44, 21 February 2008

Highest Impact Structures of All TimeHighest Impact Structures of All Time

Below you are invited to list pages about structures that you believe to be among the highest impact since the first empirical macromolecular structures were determined. Please do not list a structure unless you provide a justification in the form of a brief description of its impact.

More about some of the earliest structures and their PDB files is here.
  • 1953 - DNA double helix (B form): Although Watson and Crick's model was theoretical, it was correct, and for the first time explained the ability of genes to be faithfully copied during cell division. It was not confirmed by atomic resolution X-ray crystallography until 1973, using RNA dinucleotide crystals. A full turn of B form DNA was not solved until 1980 (cf. 1bna), 27 years after Watson and Crick's model. More: click on DNA at [1]
  • 1958 - Myoglobin: As the first protein structure that was determined, it is hard to exaggerate its impact. Before this structure, there was very little understanding of 3D protein structure.
  • 1965 - Lysozyme: The first enzyme solved.
  • 1974 - Transfer RNA: The first 3D RNA structure solved.

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Eric Martz, Joel Janin, Karsten Theis, Eran Hodis, Wayne Decatur, Adithya Sagar, Israel Hanukoglu, Joel L. Sussman