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  2. 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.

  3. Alpha helix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_helix

    An alpha helix (or α-helix) is a sequence of amino acids in a protein that are twisted into a coil (a helix). The alpha helix is the most common structural arrangement in the secondary structure of proteins. It is also the most extreme type of local structure, and it is the local structure that is most easily predicted from a sequence of amino ...

  4. Helix bundle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_bundle

    Other examples of four-helix bundles include cytochrome, ferritin, human growth hormone, cytokine, [5] and Lac repressor C-terminal. The four-helix bundle fold has proven an attractive target for de novo protein design , with numerous de novo four-helix bundle proteins having been successfully designed by rational [ 6 ] and by combinatorial [ 7 ...

  5. Leucine zipper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leucine_zipper

    "Overhead view", or helical wheel diagram, of a leucine zipper, where d represents leucine, arranged with other amino acids on two parallel alpha helices.. A leucine zipper (or leucine scissors [1]) is a common three-dimensional structural motif in proteins.

  6. Protein structure prediction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_structure_prediction

    An alpha-helix with hydrogen bonds (yellow dots) The α-helix is the most abundant type of secondary structure in proteins. The α-helix has 3.6 amino acids per turn with an H-bond formed between every fourth residue; the average length is 10 amino acids (3 turns) or 10 Å but varies from 5 to 40 (1.5 to 11 turns).

  7. Helix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix

    Helices are important in biology, as the DNA molecule is formed as two intertwined helices, and many proteins have helical substructures, known as alpha helices. The word helix comes from the Greek word ἕλιξ, "twisted, curved". [1] A "filled-in" helix – for example, a "spiral" (helical) ramp – is a surface called a helicoid. [2]

  8. Z-DNA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z-DNA

    Z-DNA is one of the many possible double helical structures of DNA. It is a left-handed double helical structure in which the helix winds to the left in a zigzag pattern, instead of to the right, like the more common B-DNA form. Z-DNA is thought to be one of three biologically active double-helical structures along with A-DNA and B-DNA.

  9. Helix-turn-helix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix-turn-helix

    The winged helix-turn-helix (wHTH) motif is formed by a 3-helical bundle and a 3- or 4-strand beta-sheet (wing). The topology of helices and strands in the wHTH motifs may vary. In the transcription factor ETS wHTH folds into a helix-turn-helix motif on a four-stranded anti-parallel beta-sheet scaffold arranged in the order α1-β1-β2-α2-α3 ...