Help:Viewing pages
This is a brief tutorial on how to view 3D figures in a Proteopedia article. If you print this guide, you could also look at any other Proteopedia page and go through the tutorial. Alternatively, you can also watch the video once it is done.
Example structure: LysozymeExample structure: Lysozyme
In this tutorial, we will use lysozyme bound to a as our example structure. In the , the protein is shown in deepskyblue as a carbon alpha trace, and the carbohydrate is shown in all-bonds, colored using the CPK color scheme. Lysozyme was the first enzyme structure to be solved.
Basic reading and viewingBasic reading and viewing
- Read the text: Read the text (tell your browser if you need a bigger font by clicking control-plus) and use the scroll bar on the right to navigate. Don't follow any hyperlinks directly (because you will have to reload the proteopedia page if you do). If you want to check out a hyperlink, try right-clicking it to open the link in a new tab of your browser.
- Click on : While reading, as you encounter , click on it to get a new figure the the 3D window integrated into the text. Sometimes the 3D window is not visible on the screen, and you have to scroll up or down to find it.
- Look at the 3D figures: The text should explain what you see. Is it an overall view or a zoomed-in detailed view? Do you know what the colors mean? Are there any labels? You can learn more about the depicted structure by using techniques explained in the following sections. If the figure is too small, either make it bigger using the magnifier glass at the bottom of the 3D window (this will squeeze the text, though) or open a new window using the popup control at the bottom of the 3D window (this will not react to clicking on green links, though).
- Use the mouse to rotate the 3D figure: To really appreciate the three-dimensional nature of proteins and other molecules, you should drag the molecule to change the view. Imagine that when you drag, you are holding on to the atoms in the foreground, and dragging them while the center of rotation stays put. Try it. After rotating the molecules, can you see any features that were hidden before? Does it become easier to visualize the three-dimensional shape as you move the molecule?
Using the mouse
The menu is quite extensive, and we will only discuss a small subset here. To open the Jmol menu, press control and click the mouse with the mouse pointer in the 3D window, or right-click the mouse if possible.
Using the consoleThe console is a way to pass any command to Jmol. As a casual user of Jmol, you only need to know a handful of commands not available through the menu. If you become a frequent user of Jmol, you might stop using the menu and type commands instead once you are familiar with them.
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