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  2. Protein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein

    The words protein, polypeptide, and peptide are a little ambiguous and can overlap in meaning. Protein is generally used to refer to the complete biological molecule in a stable conformation, whereas peptide is generally reserved for a short amino acid oligomers often lacking a stable 3D structure. But the boundary between the two is not well ...

  3. List of proteins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_proteins

    At the top level are all alpha proteins (domains consisting of alpha helices), all beta proteins (domains consisting of beta sheets), and mixed alpha helix/beta sheet proteins. While most proteins adopt a single stable fold, a few proteins can rapidly interconvert between one or more folds. These are referred to as metamorphic proteins. [5]

  4. Biochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biochemistry

    Biochemistry is closely related to molecular biology, the study of the molecular mechanisms of biological phenomena. [5] Much of biochemistry deals with the structures, functions, and interactions of biological macromolecules such as proteins, nucleic acids, carbohydrates, and lipids.

  5. Outline of biochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_biochemistry

    Proteins : amino acid – glycine – arginine – lysine; peptide – primary structure – secondary structure – tertiary structure – conformation – protein folding; Chemical properties: molecular bond – covalent bond – ionic bond – hydrogen bond – ester – ethyl; molecular charge – hydrophilic – hydrophobic – polar; pH ...

  6. Protein structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_structure

    Protein structures range in size from tens to several thousand amino acids. [2] By physical size, proteins are classified as nanoparticles, between 1–100 nm. Very large protein complexes can be formed from protein subunits. For example, many thousands of actin molecules assemble into a microfilament.

  7. Protein domain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_domain

    Pyruvate kinase, a protein with three domains (In molecular biology, a protein domain is a region of a protein's polypeptide chain that is self-stabilizing and that folds independently from the rest. Each domain forms a compact folded three-dimensional structure. Many proteins consist of several domains, and a domain may appear in a variety of ...

  8. Proteomics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proteomics

    Robotic preparation of MALDI mass spectrometry samples on a sample carrier. Proteomics is the large-scale study of proteins. [1] [2] Proteins are vital macromolecules of all living organisms, with many functions such as the formation of structural fibers of muscle tissue, enzymatic digestion of food, or synthesis and replication of DNA.

  9. Structural biology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_biology

    With the development of these three techniques, the field of structural biology expanded and also became a branch of molecular biology, biochemistry, and biophysics concerned with the molecular structure of biological macromolecules (especially proteins, made up of amino acids, RNA or DNA, made up of nucleotides, and membranes, made up of ...