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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The structure of proteins; two hydrogen-bonded helical configurations of the polypeptide chain.

Linus Pauling, +2 more
- 01 Apr 1951 - 
- Vol. 37, Iss: 4, pp 205-211
TLDR
This work has used information about interatomic distances, bond angles, and other configurational parameters to construct two reasonable hydrogen-bonded helical configurations for the polypeptide chain; it is likely that these configurations constitute an important part of the structure of both fibrous and globular proteins, as well as of syntheticpolypeptides.
Abstract
During the past fifteen years we have been attacking the problem of the structure of proteins in several ways. One of these ways is the complete and accurate determination of the crystal structure of amino acids, peptides, and other simple substances related to proteins, in order that information about interatomic distances, bond angles, and other configurational parameters might be obtained that would permit the reliable prediction of reasonable configurations for the polypeptide chain. We have now used this information to construct two reasonable hydrogen-bonded helical configurations for the polypeptide chain; we think that it is likely that these configurations constitute an important part of the structure of both fibrous and globular proteins, as well as of synthetic polypeptides. A letter announcing their discovery was published last year [1]. The problem that we have set ourselves is that of finding all hydrogen-bonded structures for a single polypeptide chain, in which the residues are equivalent (except for the differences in the side chain R). An amino acid residue (other than glycine) has no symmetry elements. The general operation of conversion of one residue of a single chain into a second residue equivalent to the first is accordingly a rotation about an axis accompanied by translation along the axis. Hence the only configurations for a chain compatible with our postulate of equivalence of the residues are helical configurations. For rotational angle 180° the helical configurations may degenerate to a simple chain with all of the principal atoms, C, C' (the carbonyl carbon), N, and O, in the same plane.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical Rotatory Dispersion of Helical Polymers

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that for every transition in its individual residues, a helix has two transitions whose moments are respectively parallel and perpendicular to the screw axis, and that the largest contributions to the rotational strengths of these bands are equal and opposite in the two cases.
Journal ArticleDOI

A backbone-based theory of protein folding

TL;DR: Key ideas regarding protein folding developed over the past half-century are summarized and an alternative model that inverts the prevailing side-chain/backbone paradigm is proposed, which drives the chain to self-organize under folding conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The internal dynamics of globular proteins.

TL;DR: The Internal Dynamics of Globular Protein (IDGP) as mentioned in this paper is a well-known model for the internal dynamics of protein structures and its dynamics in the context of protein synthesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polymer principles and protein folding.

TL;DR: The emerging role of statistical mechanics and polymer theory in protein folding is surveyed, finding that in the polymer perspective, the folding code is more a solvation code than a code of local ØΨ propensities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal structure of human carbonic anhydrase C.

TL;DR: The three dimensional structure of human carbonic anhydrase C has been determined at 2.0 A resolution and the active site has been identified by the binding of inhibitors and the location of the zinc ion.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Two hydrogen-bonded spiral configurations of the polypeptide chain

TL;DR: In this article, two hydrogen-bonded spiral configurations of the polypeptide chain were constructed, with the residues all equivalent, except for variation in the side chain.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Structure of Fibrous Proteins.

Journal ArticleDOI

Nature of the Intramolecular Fold in Alpha-Keratin and Alpha-Myosin

TL;DR: The normal folded configuration a, the extended configuration β, and the reversible intramolecular transformation from a-keratin (or a-myosin) to β-kerATin (or β-myOSin) is the basis of the remarkable long-range elastic properties of this group of protein fibres.
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