Monday, January 24, 2011

SCATTER PLOT IN EXCEL

Objectives

  • Enter and format data in an Excel spreadsheet in a form appropriate for graphing
  • Create a scatter plot from spreadsheet data
  • Insert a linear regression line (trendline) into the scatter plot
  • Use the slope/intercept formula for the regression line to calculate a x value for a known y value
  • Explore curve fitting to scatterplot data
  • Create a connected point (line) graph
  • Place a reference line in a graph

Some examples of the application of scatter plot in excel :






Monday, January 10, 2011

SMILES ^_^ ::SIMPLIFIED MOLECULAR INPUT LINE ENTRY SPECIFICATION::

SMILES (Simplified Molecular Input Line Entry System) is a line notation (a typographical method using printable characters) for entering and representing molecules and reactions. Some examples are:














The line notations (SMILES) are the ones that located below each of the chemical structures.

Monday, January 3, 2011

PROTEIN DATA BANK

 Introduction


The Protein Data Bank (PDB) is a repository for the 3-D structural data of large biological molecules, such as proteins and nucleic acids. (See also crystallographic database). The data, typically obtained by X-ray crystallography or NMR spectroscopy and submitted by biologists and biochemists from around the world, are freely accessible on the Internet via the websites of its member organisations (PDBe, PDBj, and RCSB). The PDB is overseen by an organization called the Worldwide Protein Data Bank, wwPDB.
The PDB is a key resource in areas of structural biology, such as structural genomics. Most major scientific journals, and some funding agencies, such as the NIH in the USA, now require scientists to submit their structure data to the PDB. If the contents of the PDB are thought of as primary data, then there are hundreds of derived (i.e., secondary) databases that categorize the data differently. For example, both SCOP and CATH categorize structures according to type of structure and assumed evolutionary relations; GO categorize structures based on genes.

The RCSB PDB also provides a variety of tools and resources. Users can perform simple and advanced searches based on annotations relating to sequence, structure and function. These molecules are visualized, downloaded, and analyzed by users who range from students to specialized scientists.  

Here, I show some of the structural diagrams and the summary. The diagrams and information below can be obtain easily through the protein data bank.




HtrA

R178A mutant of the DegS-deltaPDZ protease



DegS is a periplasmic Escherichia coli protease, which functions as a trimer to catalyze the initial rate-limiting step in a proteolytic cascade that ultimately activates transcription of stress response genes in the cytoplasm. Each DegS subunit consists of a protease domain and a PDZ domain. During protein folding stress, DegS is allosterically activated by peptides exposed in misfolded outer membrane porins, which bind to the PDZ domain and stabilize the active protease. It is not known whether allostery is conferred by the PDZ domains or is an intrinsic feature of the trimeric protease domain. Here, we demonstrate that free DegS(?PDZ) equilibrates between active and inactive trimers with the latter species predominating. Substrate binding stabilizes active DegS(?PDZ) in a positively cooperative fashion. Mutations can also stabilize active DegS(?PDZ) and produce an enzyme that displays hyperbolic kinetics and degrades substrate with a maximal velocity within error of that for fully activated, intact DegS. Crystal structures of multiple DegS(?PDZ) variants, in functional and non-functional conformations, support a two-state model in which allosteric switching is mediated by changes in specific elements of tertiary structure in the context of an invariant trimeric base. Overall, our results indicate that protein substrates must bind sufficiently tightly and specifically to the functional conformation of DegS(?PDZ) to assist their own degradation. Thus, substrate binding alone may have regulated the activities of ancestral DegS trimers with subsequent fusion of the protease domain to a PDZ domain, resulting in ligand-mediated regulation. 


LonA

Crystal structure of Bacillus subtilis Lon N-terminal domain


Lon ATP-dependent proteases are key components of the protein quality control systems of bacterial cells and eukaryotic organelles. Eubacterial Lon proteases contain an N-terminal domain, an ATPase domain, and a protease domain, all in one polypeptide chain. The N-terminal domain is thought to be involved in substrate recognition, the ATPase domain in substrate unfolding and translocation into the protease chamber, and the protease domain in the hydrolysis of polypeptides into small peptide fragments. Like other AAA+ ATPases and self-compartmentalising proteases, Lon functions as an oligomeric complex, although the subunit stoichiometry is currently unclear. Here, we present crystal structures of truncated versions of Lon protease from Bacillus subtilis (BsLon), which reveal previously unknown architectural features of Lon complexes. Our analytical ultracentrifugation and electron microscopy show different oligomerisation of Lon proteases from two different bacterial species, Aquifex aeolicus and B. subtilis. The structure of BsLon-AP shows a hexameric complex consisting of a small part of the N-terminal domain, the ATPase, and protease domains. The structure shows the approximate arrangement of the three functional domains of Lon. It also reveals a resemblance between the architecture of Lon proteases and the bacterial proteasome-like protease HslUV. Our second structure, BsLon-N, represents the first 209 amino acids of the N-terminal domain of BsLon and consists of a globular domain, similar in structure to the E. coli Lon N-terminal domain, and an additional four-helix bundle, which is part of a predicted coiled-coil region. An unexpected dimeric interaction between BsLon-N monomers reveals the possibility that Lon complexes may be stabilised by coiled-coil interactions between neighbouring N-terminal domains. Together, BsLon-N and BsLon-AP are 36 amino acids short of offering a complete picture of a full-length Lon protease.


ClpP

Crystal structure of H.pylori ClpP



ClpP and its ATPase compartment, ClpX or ClpA, remove misfolded proteins in cells and are of utmost importance in protein quality control. The ring hexamers of ClpA or ClpX recognize, unfold, and translocate target substrates into the degradation chamber of the double-ring tetradecamer of ClpP. The overall reaction scheme catalyzed by ClpXP or ClpAP has been proposed; however, the molecular mechanisms associated with substrate recognition and degradation have not yet been clarified in detail. To investigate these mechanisms, we determined the crystal structures of ClpP from Helicobacter pylori in complex with product peptides bound to the active site as well as in the apo state. In the complex structure, the peptides are zipped with two antiparallel strands of ClpP and point to the adjacent active site, thus providing structural explanations for the broad substrate specificity, the product inhibition and the processive degradation of substrates in the chamber. The structures also suggest that substrate binding causes local conformational changes around the active site that ultimately induce the active conformation of ClpP.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

ACD / CHEMSKETCH

ACD/ChemSketch is a chemically intelligent drawing interface that allows you to draw almost any chemical structure including organics, organometallics, polymers, and Markush structures. Use it to produce professional looking structures and diagrams for reports and publications.

Features

* Draw and view structures in 2D, or render in 3D to view from any angle
* Draw reactions and reaction schemes, and calculate reactant quantities
* Generate structures from InChI and SMILES strings
* Generate IUPAC systematic names for molecules of up to 50 atoms and 3 ring structures
* Predict logP for individual structures
* Search for structures in the built-in dictionary of over 165,000 systematic, trivial, and trade names

Benefits

* Visualize chemical structures in 2D or 3D to gain more insight into spatial configurations, and relationships to molecular properties
* Create professional reports, working with structures, text, and graphics simultaneously

ACD/ChemSketch also allows you to check other tautomeric forms for your drawn structure. Consideration of tautomeric forms is very important for structure searching, predictions (such as physicochemical properties, i.e., pKa), and interpretation (i.e., of NMR, MS, and other analytical data).

Additional Resources

1. Some file formats require the installation of ChemBasic Goodies, a separate download and installation for freeware users
2. You can still input structures from unsupported formats by opening the file with another program and pasting it into ACD/ChemSketch as an OLE object

See some examples of molecules drawn with ACD/ChemSketch :


1)Drawing the energy of reaction diagram


2)Drawing different kinds of orbital


3)Drawing vacuum distillation apparatus


4)Drawing a Two-chain DNA Strand


5)Drawing Lipids and Micelles

Monday, December 20, 2010

HTML



HTML, which stands for HyperText Markup Language, is the predominant markup language for web pages. A markup language is a set of markup tags, and HTML uses markup tags to describe web pages.

HTML is written in the form of HTML elements consisting of "tags" surrounded by angle brackets (like ) within the web page content. HTML tags normally come in pairs like and . The first tag in a pair is the start tag, the second tag is the end tag (they are also called opening tags and closing tags).

The purpose of a web browser is to read HTML documents and display them as web pages. The browser does not display the HTML tags, but uses the tags to interpret the content of the page.

HTML elements form the building blocks of all websites. HTML allows images and objects to be embedded and can be used to create interactive forms. It provides a means to create structured documents by denoting structural semantics for text such as headings, paragraphs, lists, links, quotes and other items. It can embed scripts in languages such as JavaScript which affect the behavior of HTML webpages.

HTML can also be used to include Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) to define the appearance and layout of text and other material. The W3C, maintainer of both HTML and CSS standards, encourages the use of CSS over explicit presentational markup.

HTML color code table:

Position no. Base color and Tracer Code
1 Blue 0033FF
2 Orange FF6600
3 Green 009900
4 Brown 663300
5 Black 000000
6 White FFFFFF
7 Red FF0000
8 Purple 660099
9 Yellow FFFF00
10 Grey 999999


For more HTML color code, refer : http://www.vaughns-1-pagers.com/internet/html-color-palette-81.gif