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  2. Disulfide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disulfide

    The disulfide bonds are strong, with a typical bond dissociation energy of 60 kcal/mol (251 kJ mol −1).However, being about 40% weaker than CC and C−H bonds, the disulfide bond is often the "weak link" in many molecules.

  3. DsbC protein family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DsbC_protein_family

    DsbC (Disulfide bond C) is a prokaryotic disulfide bond isomerase. The formation of native disulfide bonds play an important role in the proper folding of proteins and stabilize tertiary structures of the protein. [1] [2] [3] DsbC is one of 6 proteins in the Dsb family in prokaryotes. The other proteins are DsbA, DsbB, DsbD, DsbE and DsbG. [4]

  4. Kell antigen system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kell_antigen_system

    Two such alleles, K 1 (Kell) and K 2 (Cellano), are the most common. The kell protein is tightly bound to a second protein, XK , by a disulfide bond . Absence of the XK protein (such as through genetic deletion or through a single point mutation within the coding region of the XK gene [ 7 ] ), leads to marked reduction of the Kell antigens on ...

  5. Proteinase K - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proteinase_K

    Proteinase K is able to digest hair , hence, the name "Proteinase K". The predominant site of cleavage is the peptide bond adjacent to the carboxyl group of aliphatic and aromatic amino acids with blocked alpha amino groups. It is commonly used for its broad specificity. This enzyme belongs to Peptidase family S8 . The molecular weight of ...

  6. Oxidative folding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxidative_folding

    Especially for proteins that contain more than one disulfide bond, it is important that incorrect disulfide bonds become rearranged. This is carried out in the isomerization pathway by the protein DsbC, that acts as a disulfide isomerase. DsbC is a dimer, consisting of two identical 23 kDa subunits and has four cysteine residues in each subunit ...

  7. DsbA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DsbA

    DsbA is a bacterial thiol disulfide oxidoreductase (TDOR). DsbA is a key component of the Dsb (disulfide bond) family of enzymes. DsbA catalyzes intrachain disulfide bond formation as peptides emerge into the cell's periplasm. [2] Structurally, DsbA contains a thioredoxin domain with an inserted helical domain of unknown function. [3]

  8. Cystine knot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cystine_knot

    A cystine knot is a protein structural motif containing three disulfide bridges (formed from pairs of cysteine residues). The sections of polypeptide that occur between two of them form a loop through which a third disulfide bond passes, forming a rotaxane substructure. The cystine knot motif stabilizes protein structure and is conserved in ...

  9. Conotoxin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conotoxin

    The knottin scaffold is a very special disulfide-through-disulfide knot, in which the III-VI disulfide bond crosses the macrocycle formed by two other disulfide bonds (I-IV and II-V) and the interconnecting backbone segments, where I-VI indicates the six cysteine residues starting from the N-terminus.