Collagen Helix
In
collagen
, the
collagen helix
is a major shape in
secondary structure
. It consists of a triple
helix
made of the repetitious
amino acid
sequence
glycine
-
proline
-
hydroxyproline
. Each of the three chains is stabilized by the
steric repulsion
due to the
pyrrolidone
rings of
proline
and
hydroxyproline
residues
. The pyrrolidone rings keep out of each others way when the
polypeptide
chain assumes this extended
helical
form, which is much more open than the tightly coiled form of the
alpha helix
. The three chains are
hydrogen bonded
to each other. The
hydrogen bond donors
are the
peptide
NH groups of
glycine
residues. The
hydrogen bond acceptors
are the CO groups of residues on the other chains. The OH group of
hydroxyproline
also participates in hydrogen bonding. The rise of the collagen helix (superhelix) is 290 picometres (0.29 nm) per residue.
See also :
tertiary structure
--
α helix
--
β sheet
<< Previous
Word Browser
Next >>
contract
christian alternative music
clive barker
comic fantasy
clu programming language
history of the soviet union (1985 1991)
corsican language
commodore international
commodore (rank)
cauchy riemann equations
chaim topol
christadelphians
cable television
cholera
caldera
calculator
cash register
chronometer
cpu design
carinatae
cocktail
coptic christianity
children of god
cit
code of hammurabi
cuba libre
cosmic censorship hypothesis
catholic
crystal eastman
christopher alexander
clabbers
chaos
canopus
corum
cumberland
capella
clifford adams
complex instruction set computer
cetacea
the canterbury tales
christine de pizan
cathar
cerebrospinal fluid
cordial
Copyright 2005-2009 OnPedia.com. All Rights Reserved