The Ramachandran plot is a versatile and valuable tool that provides fundamental information for protein structure determination, prediction, and validation. The structural/thermodynamic effects produced by forcing a residue to adopt a conformation predicted to be forbidden were here explored using Thermotoga maritima Arginine Binding Protein (TmArgBP) as model. Specifically, we mutated TmArgBP Gly52 that assumes a conformation believed to be strictly disallowed for non-Gly residues. Surprisingly, the crystallographic characterization of Gly52Ala TmArgBP indicates that the structural context forces the residue to adopt a non-canonical conformation never observed in any of the high-medium resolution PDB structures. Interestingly, the inspect...
Predicting the effect of a single amino acid substitution on the stability of a protein structure is...
SummaryDespite numerous studies, understanding the structural basis of protein stability in thermoph...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, 2002.Includes bibliographi...
The Ramachandran plot is a versatile and valuable tool that provides fundamental information for pro...
The arginine binding protein from Thermatoga maritima (TmArgBP), a substrate binding protein (SBP) i...
Domain swapping is a widespread oligomerization process that is observed in a large variety of prote...
This Zenodo record is a permanently preserved version of a PREreview. You can view the complete PREr...
<div><p>The arginine binding protein from <i>Thermatoga maritima</i> (TmArgBP), a substrate binding ...
Substrate binding proteins represent a large protein family that plays fundamental roles in selectiv...
An analysis of the nature and distribution of disallowed Ramachandran conformations of amino acid re...
AbstractBackground: A large energy gap between the native state and the non-native folded states is ...
Background: Steric strain in protein three-dimensional structures is related to unfavorable inter-at...
The allowed and the ``disallowed'' regions in the celebrated Ramachandran map (phi-psi] map) was ele...
Proteins tend to adopt a single or a reduced ensemble of configurations at natural conditions [1], b...
The Ramachandran map clearly delineates the regions of accessible conformational (phi-) space for am...
Predicting the effect of a single amino acid substitution on the stability of a protein structure is...
SummaryDespite numerous studies, understanding the structural basis of protein stability in thermoph...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, 2002.Includes bibliographi...
The Ramachandran plot is a versatile and valuable tool that provides fundamental information for pro...
The arginine binding protein from Thermatoga maritima (TmArgBP), a substrate binding protein (SBP) i...
Domain swapping is a widespread oligomerization process that is observed in a large variety of prote...
This Zenodo record is a permanently preserved version of a PREreview. You can view the complete PREr...
<div><p>The arginine binding protein from <i>Thermatoga maritima</i> (TmArgBP), a substrate binding ...
Substrate binding proteins represent a large protein family that plays fundamental roles in selectiv...
An analysis of the nature and distribution of disallowed Ramachandran conformations of amino acid re...
AbstractBackground: A large energy gap between the native state and the non-native folded states is ...
Background: Steric strain in protein three-dimensional structures is related to unfavorable inter-at...
The allowed and the ``disallowed'' regions in the celebrated Ramachandran map (phi-psi] map) was ele...
Proteins tend to adopt a single or a reduced ensemble of configurations at natural conditions [1], b...
The Ramachandran map clearly delineates the regions of accessible conformational (phi-) space for am...
Predicting the effect of a single amino acid substitution on the stability of a protein structure is...
SummaryDespite numerous studies, understanding the structural basis of protein stability in thermoph...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, 2002.Includes bibliographi...