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  2. Rossmann fold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rossmann_fold

    The Rossmann fold is a tertiary fold found in proteins that bind nucleotides, such as enzyme cofactors FAD, NAD +, and NADP +.This fold is composed of alternating beta strands and alpha helical segments where the beta strands are hydrogen bonded to each other forming an extended beta sheet and the alpha helices surround both faces of the sheet to produce a three-layered sandwich.

  3. Alpha helix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_helix

    The pitch of the alpha-helix (the vertical distance between consecutive turns of the helix) is 5.4 Å (0.54 nm), which is the product of 1.5 and 3.6. The most important thing is that the N-H group of one amino acid forms a hydrogen bond with the C=O group of the amino acid four residues earlier; this repeated i + 4 → i hydrogen bonding is the ...

  4. Helical wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helical_wheel

    An example of an amino acid sequence plotted on a helical wheel. Aliphatic residues are shown as blue squares, polar or negatively charged residues as red diamonds, and positively charged residues as black octagons. A helical wheel is a type of plot or visual representation used to illustrate the properties of alpha helices in proteins.

  5. Helix bundle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_bundle

    Three-helix bundles are among the smallest and fastest known cooperatively folding structural domains. [1] The three-helix bundle in the villin headpiece domain is only 36 amino acids long and is a common subject of study in molecular dynamics simulations because its microsecond-scale folding time is within the timescales accessible to simulation.

  6. Supersecondary structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supersecondary_structure

    Two Rossmann folds in Cryptosporidium parvum lactate dehydrogenase, with NAD+ bound. A beta-alpha-beta motif is composed of two beta strands joined by an alpha helix through connecting loops. The beta strands are parallel, and the helix is also almost parallel to the strands. This structure can be seen in almost all proteins with parallel strands.

  7. Protein secondary structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_secondary_structure

    The two most common secondary structural elements are alpha helices and beta sheets, though beta turns and omega loops occur as well. Secondary structure elements typically spontaneously form as an intermediate before the protein folds into its three dimensional tertiary structure.

  8. Alpha solenoid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_solenoid

    An alpha solenoid (sometimes also known as an alpha horseshoe or as stacked pairs of alpha helices, abbreviated SPAH) is a protein fold composed of repeating alpha helix subunits, commonly helix-turn-helix motifs, arranged in antiparallel fashion to form a superhelix. [2] Alpha solenoids are known for their flexibility and plasticity. [3] Like ...

  9. Protein superfamily - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_superfamily

    Nevertheless, sequence similarity is the most commonly used form of evidence to infer relatedness, since the number of known sequences vastly outnumbers the number of known tertiary structures. [6] In the absence of structural information, sequence similarity constrains the limits of which proteins can be assigned to a superfamily.