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  2. Split-intein circular ligation of peptides and proteins

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split-intein_circular...

    A number of natural antimicrobial peptides are cyclic, and the products of SICLOPPS are "increasingly viewed as ideal backbones for modulation of protein-protein interactions." [3] Circular peptides tend to be resistant to protease activity, and may be suitable for use as orally administered drugs.

  3. Cyclic peptide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclic_peptide

    α-Amanitin Bacitracin Ciclosporin. Cyclic peptides are polypeptide chains which contain a circular sequence of bonds. [1] This can be through a connection between the amino and carboxyl ends of the peptide, for example in cyclosporin; a connection between the amino end and a side chain, for example in bacitracin; the carboxyl end and a side chain, for example in colistin; or two side chains ...

  4. Protein–ligand docking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein–ligand_docking

    Coarse-grained models are often implemented in the case of protein-peptide docking, as they frequently involve large-scale conformation transitions of the protein receptor. [7] [8] AutoDock is one of the computational tools frequently used to model the interactions between proteins and ligands during the drug discovery process. Although the ...

  5. Arginylglycylaspartic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arginylglycylaspartic_acid

    The structural rigidity of cyclic RGD peptides improves their binding properties and prevents degradation at the highly susceptible aspartic acid residue, thereby increasing their stability. [30] Many RGD derivative drugs and diagnostics are cyclized, including Eptifibatide, Cilengitide, CEND-1, and 18 F-Galacto-RGD, and 18 F-Fluciclatide-RGD.

  6. Macromolecular docking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macromolecular_docking

    Macromolecular docking is the computational modelling of the quaternary structure of complexes formed by two or more interacting biological macromolecules. Protein –protein complexes are the most commonly attempted targets of such modelling, followed by protein– nucleic acid complexes.

  7. Searching the conformational space for docking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Searching_the...

    The most common technique used in many docking programs, shape-complementarity methods focus on the match between the receptor and the ligand in order to find an optimal pose. Programs include DOCK, [3] FRED, [4] GLIDE, [5] SURFLEX, [6] eHiTS [7] and many more. Most methods describe the molecules in terms of a finite number of descriptors that ...

  8. Docking (molecular) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Docking_(molecular)

    One can think of molecular docking as a problem of “lock-and-key”, in which one wants to find the correct relative orientation of the “key” which will open up the “lock” (where on the surface of the lock is the key hole, which direction to turn the key after it is inserted, etc.).

  9. Cyclin-dependent kinase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclin-dependent_kinase

    The RXL-binding site was crucial in revealing how CDKs selectively enhance activity toward specific substrates by facilitating substrate docking. [17] Substrate specificity of S cyclins is imparted by the hydrophobic batch, which has affinity for substrate proteins that contain a hydrophobic RXL (or Cy) motif. [ 4 ]