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  2. Peptide synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peptide_synthesis

    In organic chemistry, peptide synthesis is the production of peptides, compounds where multiple amino acids are linked via amide bonds, also known as peptide bonds. Peptides are chemically synthesized by the condensation reaction of the carboxyl group of one amino acid to the amino group of another.

  3. Peptide bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peptide_bond

    Peptide bond formation via dehydration reaction. When two amino acids form a dipeptide through a peptide bond, [1] it is a type of condensation reaction. [2] In this kind of condensation, two amino acids approach each other, with the non-side chain (C1) carboxylic acid moiety of one coming near the non-side chain (N2) amino moiety of the other.

  4. Peptide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peptide

    A neuropeptide is a peptide that is active in association with neural tissue. A lipopeptide is a peptide that has a lipid connected to it, and pepducins are lipopeptides that interact with GPCRs. A peptide hormone is a peptide that acts as a hormone. A proteose is a mixture of peptides produced by the hydrolysis of proteins. The term is ...

  5. Solid-phase synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid-phase_synthesis

    The process was originally developed in the 1950s and 1960s by Robert Bruce Merrifield in order to synthesise peptide chains, [4] and which was the basis for his 1984 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. [5] In the basic method of solid-phase synthesis, building blocks that have two functional groups are used.

  6. Ribbon diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribbon_diagram

    Ribbon diagrams are simple yet powerful, expressing the visual basics of a molecular structure (twist, fold and unfold). This method has successfully portrayed the overall organization of protein structures, reflecting their three-dimensional nature and allowing better understanding of these complex objects both by expert structural biologists ...

  7. Ramachandran plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramachandran_plot

    The ω angle at the peptide bond is normally 180°, since the partial-double-bond character keeps the peptide bond planar. [3] The figure in the top right shows the allowed φ,ψ backbone conformational regions from the Ramachandran et al. 1963 and 1968 hard-sphere calculations: full radius in solid outline, reduced radius in dashed, and ...

  8. Peptide microarray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peptide_microarray

    A peptide microarray is a planar slide with peptides spotted onto it or assembled directly on the surface by in-situ synthesis. Whereas peptides spotted can undergo quality controls that include mass spectrometer analysis and concentration normalization before spotting and result from a single synthetic batch, peptides synthesized directly on the surface may suffer from batch-to-batch ...

  9. N-terminus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N-terminus

    It often contains signal peptide sequences, "intracellular postal codes" that direct delivery of the protein to the proper organelle. The signal peptide is typically removed at the destination by a signal peptidase. The N-terminal amino acid of a protein is an important determinant of its half-life (likelihood of being degraded).