Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Top7> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 17 of
17
with 100 items per page.
- Top7 abstract "Top7 is an artificial 93-residue protein, classified as a de novo protein since it was designed by Brian Kuhlman and Gautam Dantas in David Baker's laboratory at the University of Washington to have a unique fold not found in nature. The protein was designed ab initio on a computer with the help of protein structure prediction algorithms. Determination of the high-resolution X-ray structure of the experimentally expressed and purified protein revealed that the structure (PDB ID: 1QYS) was indeed very similar (1.2 Å RMSD) to the computer-designed model. The structure consists of two alpha helices packed on a five-stranded anti-parallel beta sheet.Top7 was featured as the RCSB Protein Data Bank's 'Molecule of the Month' in October 2005, and a superposition of the respective cores (residues 60-79) of its predicted and X-ray crystal structures are featured in the Rosetta@home logo.".
- Top7 wikiPageExternalLink explore.do?structureId=1QYS.
- Top7 wikiPageID "953448".
- Top7 wikiPageRevisionID "546490489".
- Top7 hasPhotoCollection Top7.
- Top7 subject Category:Engineered_proteins.
- Top7 subject Category:Protein_structure.
- Top7 subject Category:Proteins.
- Top7 comment "Top7 is an artificial 93-residue protein, classified as a de novo protein since it was designed by Brian Kuhlman and Gautam Dantas in David Baker's laboratory at the University of Washington to have a unique fold not found in nature. The protein was designed ab initio on a computer with the help of protein structure prediction algorithms.".
- Top7 label "Top7".
- Top7 label "Top7".
- Top7 sameAs Top7.
- Top7 sameAs m.03s_14.
- Top7 sameAs Q7824374.
- Top7 sameAs Q7824374.
- Top7 wasDerivedFrom Top7?oldid=546490489.
- Top7 isPrimaryTopicOf Top7.