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DBpedia 2014

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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p The Asx turnis a structural feature in proteins and polypeptides. It consists of three amino acid residues (labeled i, i+1 and i+2) in which residue i is an aspartate (asp) or asparagine (asn) that forms a hydrogen bond from its sidechain CO group to the mainchain NH group of residue i+2. About 14% of asx residues present in proteins belong to asx turns. Two websites are available for finding and examining asx-turns in proteins, Motivated Proteins and PDBeMotif.Four types of asx turn can be distinguished: types I, I’, II and II’. These categories correspond to those of the better-known hydrogen-bonded beta-turns (see turn (biochemistry)), which have four residues and a hydrogen bond between the CO of residue i and the NH of residue i+3. Asx turns and beta turns have structurally similar hydrogen-bonded loops and exhibit sidechain-mainchain mimicry in the sense that the sidechain of residue i of the asx turn mimics the mainchain of residue i of the beta turn. Regarding their occurrence in proteins, they differ in that type I is the commonest of the four beta turns while type II’ is the commonest of the asx turns.Similar motifs occur with serine or threonine as residue i, which are called ST turns. In spite of serine and threonine having one less sidechain atom, such that the sidechain-mainchain mimicry of β-turns is imperfect, these features occur in proteins as the four types in numbers approaching those of asx turns. They also exhibit a tendency to substitute each other over evolutionary time.Asx and ST turns both occur frequently at the N-termini of α-helices.. }

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