17:1017:10, 2 June 2022diffhist+257
Amyloid
I have added a short paragraph about alpha-sheet. Although its significance for amyloidosis is not widely accepted by the scientific community at present, the accellerating favorable evidence from workers worldwide means it should be mentioned.
15:5115:51, 12 January 2022diffhist+6
User:JamesMilnerWhite/sandbox
This is a protein motif that is sufficiently common and with interesting functional aspects such that it deserves an entry in Wikipedia. It ha been named the "beta link" which should be the name of this entry.
13:2313:23, 6 January 2022diffhist+1,719
N
User:JamesMilnerWhite/sandbox
←Created page with 'Beta Link Beta links are motifs in
proteins and
polypeptides consisting of 5 amino acid residues. They are characterized by an overlap of a GI type
beta bulge and a type II
beta turn, in which the 3rd and 4th amino acids of the beta-turn are also the bulged-out side of the beta bulge [1,2]. G1 beta bulges (beta bulges with a
glycine as the first residue of the bulged-out side) typically occur in one of two composite situations, either...'
19:2019:20, 22 December 2021diffhist+1,050
Alpha sheet
New evidence showing that, in proteins, the majority of non-glycines are relatively common at the alphaL as opposed to the gammaL region, where glycine is commonest. Only now is sufficient data available to make this point. commonest.
17:1017:10, 2 June 2022diffhist+257
Amyloid
I have added a short paragraph about alpha-sheet. Although its significance for amyloidosis is not widely accepted by the scientific community at present, the accellerating favorable evidence from workers worldwide means it should be mentioned.
15:5115:51, 12 January 2022diffhist+6
User:JamesMilnerWhite/sandbox
This is a protein motif that is sufficiently common and with interesting functional aspects such that it deserves an entry in Wikipedia. It ha been named the "beta link" which should be the name of this entry.
13:2313:23, 6 January 2022diffhist+1,719
N
User:JamesMilnerWhite/sandbox
←Created page with 'Beta Link Beta links are motifs in
proteins and
polypeptides consisting of 5 amino acid residues. They are characterized by an overlap of a GI type
beta bulge and a type II
beta turn, in which the 3rd and 4th amino acids of the beta-turn are also the bulged-out side of the beta bulge [1,2]. G1 beta bulges (beta bulges with a
glycine as the first residue of the bulged-out side) typically occur in one of two composite situations, either...'
19:2019:20, 22 December 2021diffhist+1,050
Alpha sheet
New evidence showing that, in proteins, the majority of non-glycines are relatively common at the alphaL as opposed to the gammaL region, where glycine is commonest. Only now is sufficient data available to make this point. commonest.