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Histones Across the Tree of Life

February 2026

Uncovering the evolutionary diversity of histones

Natural RNA-Only Assemblies

January 2026

Large and intricate naturally occurring structures composed exclusively of RNA

FOXP3

December 2025

A master transcriptional regulator of immune tolerance

GLP-1 Receptor Agonists

November 2025

Popular and effective drugs for the treatment of obesity and diabetes

Incretins

October 2025

GLP-1 and GIP are hormones that are released soon after you eat a meal

Abscisic Acid Receptor

September 2025

Regulating drought tolerance in plants

Activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated protein (Arc)

August 2025

An unexpected link between viruses and the brain

Capturing Beta-Lactamase in Action

July 2025

Researchers visualize the mechanism of antibiotic resistance

Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus

June 2025

Infection by EEEV can cause severe neurological disease

TOC-TIC Translocon

May 2025

The large TOC-TIC supercomplex transports proteins into the chloroplast

Apolipoprotein B-100 and LDL Receptor

April 2025

Insights into how LDL is removed from the bloodstream

Enoyl-CoA Carboxylases/Reductases

March 2025

Enzymes that can quickly and efficiently fix carbon

H5 Hemagglutinin

February 2025

Sugar-binding protein on the surface of the H5N1 avian influenza virus

Assembly Line Polyketide Synthases

January 2025

Large multienzyme complexes that synthesize diverse small molecules in a stepwise manner

Flagellar Motor

December 2024

Bidirectional motors power the swimming of many bacterial cells.

Malaria Parasite PTEX

November 2024

The parasite that causes malaria exports hundreds of proteins to remodel the cells that it infects.

Angiotensin and Blood Pressure

October 2024

Many medications for controlling high blood pressure inhibit the action of the peptide hormone angiotensin.

Carbon Capture Mechanisms

September 2024

Scientists are studying cyanobacteria to improve the productivity of agricultural crops

ESCRT-III

August 2024

ESCRT-III forms helical assemblies that remodel cellular membranes

Ribosome Diversity

July 2024

By comparing the structures of ribosomes from different organisms, we can explore the evolution of life.

Injectisome

June 2024

Salmonella bacteria inject a cocktail of effector proteins into cells to disable their defenses.

CFTR and Cystic Fibrosis

May 2024

Cystic fibrosis is currently treated using drugs that enhance the function of mutated CFTR

YES Complex

April 2024

Bacteriophage phiX174 makes a small protein that kills bacterial cells.

Hyaluronidases

March 2024

Long carbohydrate chains are used to make our bodies flexible and resilient.

Nanowires

February 2024

Nanowires conduct electrons one at a time inside biological molecules.

Mediator

January 2024

Mediator integrates regulatory information to decide when genes need to be transcribed.

Vitamins

December 2023

Vitamins are essential molecular tools that are obtained through a healthy diet.

ZAR1 Resistosome

November 2023

Plants protect themselves from infection with immune system machines such as the resistosome

RSV Fusion Glycoprotein

October 2023

Structures of the fusion glycoprotein from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) were used to engineer effective vaccines to fight viral infection.

Histone Deacetylases

September 2023

Histone deacetylases regulate access to genetic information by modifying histones

ATM and ATR Kinases

August 2023

Dividing cells use ATM and ATR kinases to respond to DNA damage.

c-Abl Protein Kinase and Imatinib

July 2023

Protein kinases are being targeted by new anti-cancer drugs

Odorant Receptors

June 2023

Our sense of smell relies on odorant receptors that recognize specific scents.

Cellulases and Bioenergy

May 2023

Powerful fungal enzymes break down cellulose during industrial production of ethanol from plant material.

MHC I Peptide Loading Complex

April 2023

Several steps of quality control optimize the peptides that are displayed by MHC I.

Anaphase-Promoting Complex / Cyclosome

March 2023

APC/C guards the checkpoints that regulate key steps in the cell cycle

SARS-CoV-2 Nucleocapsid and Home Tests

February 2023

Home test kits for SARS-CoV-2 test for the presence of nucleocapsid, the protein that packages the viral genome in infectious virions.

Plastic-eating Enzymes

January 2023

Researchers are looking to Nature to find ways to dispose of discarded plastic.

Click Chemistry

December 2022

A modular approach to chemistry simplifies the construction of complex protein-targeting molecules.

Actin Branching by Arp2/3 Complex

November 2022

By mimicking actin, Arp2/3 complex helps build a complex cytoskeleton that supports and shapes cells.

Phytohormone Receptor DWARF14

October 2022

Some phytohormones mobilize the cell’s protein degradation machinery to regulate plant growth and development.

Respiratory Supercomplex

September 2022

In our mitochondria, three electron-transport complexes assemble into a supercomplex.

Secretory Antibodies

August 2022

Secretory immunoglobulins are our most abundant antibodies, providing a first line of defense against pathogens.

Non-Homologous End Joining Supercomplexes

July 2022

Lethal double-strand breaks in the DNA genome are repaired by NHEJ

Pyruvate Kinase M2

June 2022

Pyruvate kinases are the paradoxical gatekeepers for cancer cell metabolism and growth.

Nicotine, Cancer, and Addiction

May 2022

Nicotine causes addiction by interacting with receptors in the brain

HER2/neu and Trastuzumab

April 2022

Trastuzumab monoclonal antibodies targeting HER2 receptors are at the forefront of breast cancer treatment

Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VegF) and Angiogenesis

March 2022

VegF promotes blood vessel formation (angiogenesis), affecting cancer proliferation, wound healing, and other bodily processes.

Oligosaccharyltransferase

February 2022

Oligosaccharyltransferase adds a protective coat of carbohydrates to proteins.

Golgi Casein Kinase

January 2022

Casein and many other secreted proteins are phosphorylated by Golgi casein kinase

SARS-CoV-2 Spike Variants

December 2021

SARS-CoV-2 is constantly changing, posing new challenges during the COVID19 pandemic

Acetohydroxyacid Synthase

November 2021

In plants, AHAS performs the first step in synthesis of three essential amino acids, making it an effective target for herbicides.

Fifty Years of Open Access to PDB Structures

October 2021

The Protein Data Bank is celebrating its golden anniversary!

DNA-Sequencing Nanopores

September 2021

Designer nanopores work with enzymes to offer pocket-sized DNA sequencing

Ribonuclease P

August 2021

The ribozyme ribonuclease P cleaves pre-tRNA to form functional tRNA.

Designed Proteins and Citizen Science

July 2021

What if people with no formal experience in science could help to improve or even rewrite nature, simply by playing a game?

Glucocorticoid Receptor and Dexamethasone

June 2021

An anti-inflammatory drug has given us a new way to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.

Fetal Hemoglobin

May 2021

Fetal hemoglobin allows a growing fetus to receive oxygen from their mother.

SARS-CoV-2 Spike and Antibodies

April 2021

Structural biologists are revealing the many ways that antibodies recognize SARS-CoV-2

Cisplatin and DNA

March 2021

Cisplatin treats cancer by causing damage to the DNA of cancer cells.

Cellulose Synthase

February 2021

Plants build tough cellulose strands one sugar at a time.

Expressome

January 2021

In bacteria, ribosomes start building proteins as messenger RNA is being transcribed

Hepatitis C Virus Protease/Helicase

December 2020

Structures of hepatitis C viral proteins have led to the discovery of direct-acting antivirals.

Adenylyl Cyclase

November 2020

Adenylyl cyclase creates second messengers to amplify signals from G-protein coupled receptors

Capsaicin Receptor TRPV1

October 2020

TRPV1 is an ion channel that senses heat and contributes to pain sensation.

SARS-CoV-2 RNA-dependent RNA Polymerase

September 2020

Coronaviruses duplicate their RNA genome using a specialized polymerase

Phytosulfokine Receptor

August 2020

Phytosulfokine and other small peptides deliver signals about growth and development in plants.

Myelin-associated Glycoprotein

July 2020

Nerve axons are insulated and protected by a sheath of myelin

SARS-CoV-2 Spike

June 2020

Coronavirus spike protein binds to receptors on cell surfaces, and is a target for vaccine development.

Spliceosomes

May 2020

Cryoelectron microscropy is revealing how spliceosomes cut-and-paste messenger RNA molecules.

Photosynthetic Supercomplexes

April 2020

Light is captured by huge supercomplexes of photosystems and antenna systems.

Voltage-gated Sodium Channels

March 2020

Voltage-gated sodium channels transmit signals in a wave through the nervous system.

Coronavirus Proteases

February 2020

Coronavirus proteases are attractive targets for the design of antiviral drugs.

Twenty Years of Molecules

January 2020

Celebrating the structural biology revolution

Hypoxia-Inducible Factors

December 2019

HIF-α is a molecular switch that responds to changing oxygen levels.

Phospholipase A2

November 2019

Phospholipase A2 breaks membrane lipids, forming molecules that contribute to inflammation and pain signaling.

Ribonucleotide Reductase

October 2019

Ribonucleotide reductase creates the building blocks of DNA

Nanodiscs and HDL

September 2019

Nanodiscs conveniently package a small piece of membrane for experimental studies.

Cyclin and Cyclin-dependent Kinase

August 2019

Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases control when cells divide, making them important targets for cancer therapy.

AMPA Receptor

July 2019

Receptors for the neurotransmitter glutamate in our brain come in several shapes and sizes.

MDM2 and Cancer

June 2019

MDM2 controls the action of p53 tumor suppressor, making it a target for cancer chemotherapy.

S-Nitrosylated Hemoglobin

May 2019

Nitric oxide is attached to a conserved cysteine in hemoglobin and then released to control the flow of blood.

Proteins and Biominerals

April 2019

Small biomineral crystals are used to build bone, eggshells and even tiny compasses.

Measles Virus Proteins

March 2019

Six proteins in measles virus work together to infect cells.

Initiation Factor eIF4E

February 2019

Initiation factors for protein synthesis interact through disordered chains.

Fluorescent RNA Aptamers

January 2019

RNA aptamers are being engineered to track molecules inside living cells

Directed Evolution of Enzymes

December 2018

Biological evolution is being harnessed in the lab to create new enzymes.

Telomerase

November 2018

Telomerase maintains the ends of our chromosomes.

Aminoglycoside Antibiotics and Resistance

October 2018

Bacteria become resistant to aminoglycosides by destroying them or changing their target.

Phytase

September 2018

Phytase is used in agriculture to mobilize indigestible phosphate compounds in livestock feed.

Legumain

August 2018

Legumain cleaves proteins, and can also put them back together.

Piezo1 Mechanosensitive Channel

July 2018

Mechanosensitive ion channels give our cells a sense of touch.

Proteins and Nanoparticles

June 2018

Nanotech scientists are designing new ways to combine proteins and nanoparticles

Human Papillomavirus and Vaccines

May 2018

The capsid protein of papillomavirus is used in vaccines that prevent cervical cancer.

Dehalogenases

April 2018

Bacteria destroy toxic environmental pollutants that include chlorine or bromine atoms.

Vacuolar ATPase

March 2018

Two linked molecular motors are used to pump protons across membranes.

EPSP Synthase and Weedkillers

February 2018

The weedkiller Roundup attacks a key enzyme involved in the construction of aromatic compounds.

Opioid Receptors

January 2018

Morphine and other opioid drugs bind to receptors in the nervous system, controlling pain

Biodegradable Plastic

December 2017

Bacteria build biodegradable plastic that could be better for the environment

Aspartate Transcarbamoylase

November 2017

Key biosynthetic enzymes are regulated by their ultimate products through allosteric motions.

Chimeric Antigen Receptors

October 2017

T cells may be engineered with chimeric antigen receptors to attack cancer cells.

Sirtuins

September 2017

Sirtuin activation is being explored as a way to slow aging.

Glutathione Transferases

August 2017

Glutathione transferase tags toxic molecules, making them easy to recognize and remove.

Pilus Machine

July 2017

A molecular machine with a rotary motor builds a long protein filament involved in bacterial motility and attachment.

Adenine Riboswitch in Action

June 2017

XFEL serial crystallography reveals what happens when adenine binds to a riboswitch

Tissue Transglutaminase and Celiac Disease

May 2017

Tissue transglutaminase staples proteins together by forming a chemical crosslink.

Glucose Transporters

April 2017

Glucose transporters deliver glucose molecules one-by-one across cell membranes.

Photoactive Yellow Protein

March 2017

Researchers use synchrotrons and X-ray lasers to reveal the rapid processes of light sensing.

Globin Evolution

February 2017

The mechanisms of molecular evolution are revealed in globin sequences and structures.

Nuclear Pore Complex

January 2017

The nuclear pore complex is the gateway between the nucleus and cytoplasm.

PD-1 (Programmed Cell Death Protein 1)

December 2016

PD-1 and its ligands are a new target for cancer therapy

Aminopeptidase 1 and Autophagy

November 2016

Aminopeptidase 1 is delivered inside the cell using the machinery of autophagy

Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4

October 2016

Inhibitors of dipeptidyl peptidase 4 are used to treat type-2 diabetes

Isoprene Synthase

September 2016

Plants release a billion metric tons of isoprene and other organic gases every year.

Quasisymmetry in Icosahedral Viruses

August 2016

Viruses use quasisymmetry to build large capsids out of many small subunits

Monellin

July 2016

Monellin and other supersweet proteins trick our taste receptors.

Beta-galactosidase

June 2016

Beta-galactosidase is a powerful tool for genetic engineering of bacteria

Zika Virus

May 2016

Cryo-electron microscopy reveals the structure of Zika virus

Lead Poisoning

April 2016

Lead ions poison proteins throughout the body, blocking their normal function.

RAF Protein Kinases

March 2016

A single mutation in a RAF protein kinase can help transform a normal cell into a cancer cell.

Designer Insulins

February 2016

Engineered insulins have been developed to improve treatment of diabetes

Siderocalin

January 2016

Our innate immune system starves bacteria of iron using siderocalin.

Vancomycin

December 2015

The antibiotic vancomycin blocks the construction of bacterial cell walls.

Glutamate-gated Chloride Receptors

November 2015

The antibiotic ivermectin attacks glutamate-gated chloride channels, paralyzing parasitic worms.

Two-component Systems

October 2015

Bacteria respond to their environment with two-component sensing systems.

Amyloids

September 2015

Alzheimer's disease and prion diseases are linked to unnatural aggregation of proteins into amyloid fibrils.

Tetrahydrobiopterin Biosynthesis

August 2015

Tetrahydrobiopterin plays an essential role in the production of aromatic amino acids, neurotransmitters and nitric oxide.

New Delhi Metallo-Beta-Lactamase

July 2015

Antibiotics can save lives, but antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria pose a dangerous threat

Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products

June 2015

RAGE recognizes sugar-modified proteins, contributing to an inflammatory response that plays a role in diabetes

Titin

May 2015

The giant protein titin organizes the structure of muscle and gives them elasticity

Glucagon

April 2015

Glucagon triggers the release of glucose into the blood, to power cells throughout the body

Phototropin

March 2015

Phototrophins sense the level of blue light, allowing plants to respond to changing environmental conditions

Insulin Receptor

February 2015

The cellular receptor for insulin helps control the utilization of glucose by cells

Cascade and CRISPR

January 2015

Cascade and CRISPR help bacteria remember how to fight viral infection

TAL Effectors

December 2014

TAL-effectors are modular, DNA-reading proteins that can be used to edit DNA in living cells

Methyl-coenzyme M Reductase

November 2014

Methanogens use sophisticated molecular tools to build methane

Ebola Virus Proteins

October 2014

Structures of ebola virus proteins are giving new hope for fighting this deadly virus

Apoptosomes

September 2014

Apoptosomes make life or death decisions in cells

Dynein

August 2014

The motor protein dynein transports cellular cargo along microtubules

Microtubules

July 2014

The largest filaments of the cytoskeleton provide tracks for transport throughout the cell

GFP-like Proteins

June 2014

GFP-like proteins found in nature or engineered in the laboratory now span every color of the rainbow

Aquaporin

May 2014

Aquaporins create a channel for water molecules to cross through cell membranes

RecA and Rad51

April 2014

Broken DNA strands may be repaired by matching sequences in a duplicate copy of the DNA

Neurotransmitter Transporters

March 2014

Neurotransmitters are transported out of nerve synapses to end a signal transmission

Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies

February 2014

Structural studies of broadly neutralizing antibodies are paving the way to vaccines for HIV, influenza and RSV

HIV Envelope Glycoprotein

January 2014

Envelope protein attaches HIV to the cells that it infects and powers fusion of the virus with the cell membrane

DNA Helicase

December 2013

DNA helicase pries apart the two strands in a DNA double helix, powered by ATP

SNARE Proteins

November 2013

SNARE proteins power the fusion of vesicles with membranes by forming a bundle of alpha helices

Proteasome

October 2013

Proteasomes destroy damaged or obsolete proteins inside cells

Designed Protein Cages

September 2013

Researchers are modifying natural proteins to design new self-assembling protein cages

Serotonin Receptor

August 2013

Serotonin receptors control mood, emotion, and many other behaviors, and are targets for many important drugs

HIV Capsid

July 2013

At the center of HIV, an unusual cone-shaped capsid protects the viral genome and delivers it into infected cells

Dermcidin

June 2013

Small toxic peptides help protect us from bacterial infection

Ricin

May 2013

The structure of ricin reveals how it kills cells and how vaccines can produce immunity against ricin poisoning

Actinomycin

April 2013

Some antibiotics attack cells by intercalating between the bases in a DNA double helix

Erythrocruorin

March 2013

Earthworms build a huge version of hemoglobin to carry oxygen

Proton-Gated Urea Channel

February 2013

A channel that passes urea allows ulcer-producing bacteria to live in the stomach

Transfer-Messenger RNA

January 2013

tmRNA rescues ribosomes that are stalled by damaged messenger RNA

ABO Blood Type Glycosyltransferases

December 2012

ABO blood types are determined by an enzyme that attaches sugars to proteins

Vitamin D Receptor

November 2012

Vitamin D helps regulate the use of calcium throughout the body

Citric Acid Cycle

October 2012

Eight enzymes form a cyclic pathway for energy production and biosynthesis

Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex

September 2012

A huge molecular complex links three sequential reactions for energy production

cAMP-dependent Protein Kinase (PKA)

August 2012

PKA delivers cellular signals by adding phosphates to proteins

Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT)

July 2012

Cells salvage and recycle their obsolete DNA and RNA

Sliding Clamps

June 2012

Sliding clamps slide along DNA strands and keep DNA polymerase on track during replication

Leptin

May 2012

Problems with the appetite-controlling hormone leptin can lead to obesity

Ras Protein

April 2012

Mutation of the growth-controlling ras protein can lead to cancer

Rhodopsin

March 2012

In our eyes, rhodopsin uses the molecule retinal to see light

Aminoglycoside Antibiotics

February 2012

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria build enzymes that destroy drugs like streptomycin

Messenger RNA Capping

January 2012

Messenger RNA molecules are capped with an inverted nucleotide

Complex I

December 2011

A proton-pumping protein complex performs the first step of the respiratory electron transport chain

Toll-like Receptors

November 2011

Toll-like receptors warn us about bacterial and viral infection

PDB Pioneers

October 2011

A dozen historic structures set the foundation for the PDB archive

O-GlcNAc Transferase

September 2011

Some protein functions are regulated when sugars are attached

Rhomboid Protease GlpG

August 2011

Some proteases cut proteins embedded in cell membranes

DNA Methyltransferases

July 2011

Cells add methyl groups to their DNA to encode additional epigenetic information

Glucansucrase

June 2011

Bacteria adhere to our teeth by building sticky sugar chains

Cytochrome bc1

May 2011

A flow of electrons powers proton pumps in cellular respiration and photosynthesis

Nanobodies

April 2011

Unusual antibodies from camels are useful in research and medicine

Integrase

March 2011

HIV integrase allows HIV to insert itself into the genome of an infected cell

Integrin

February 2011

Integrins forge flexible linkages between the infrastructure inside and outside of cells

Nitric Oxide Synthase

January 2011

Nitric oxide gas is used as a rapid-acting hormone and as a powerful defense

Adenovirus

December 2010

Adenovirus has an icosahedral capsid with unusual cell-binding fibers

Inteins

November 2010

Inteins splice themselves out of larger protein chains

Riboswitches

October 2010

Special sequences of messenger RNA can bind to regulatory molecules and affect synthesis of proteins

Isocitrate Dehydrogenase

September 2010

Atomic structures have revealed the catalytic steps of a citric acid cycle enzyme

Interferons

August 2010

Interferons mobilize defenses against viral infection

Crystallins

July 2010

A concentrated solution of crystallins refracts light in our eye lens

Epidermal Growth Factor

June 2010

EGF is part of a family of proteins that controls aspects of cell growth and development

Parvoviruses

May 2010

Viruses that cause distemper are surrounded by an icosahedral capsid

Concanavalin A and Circular Permutation

April 2010

For some proteins, clipped and reassembled sequences can produce the same 3D shape

P-glycoprotein

March 2010

P-glycoprotein pumps toxic molecules out of our cells

Enhanceosome

February 2010

Enhanceosomes help decide the appropriate time to transcribe a gene

Ribosome

January 2010

Ribosomes are complex molecular machines that build proteins

Antifreeze Proteins

December 2009

Small antifreeze proteins protect cells from damage by ice

Designed DNA Crystal

November 2009

Small pieces of DNA have been engineered to form a nanoscale lattice

Sodium-Potassium Pump

October 2009

Cells continually pump sodium ions out and potassium ions in, powered by ATP

Xanthine Oxidoreductase

September 2009

Xanthine oxidoreductase helps break down obsolete purine nucleotides

Sulfotransferases

August 2009

Sulfotransferases transfer sulfuryl groups in enzymatic reactions

Beta-secretase

July 2009

Beta-secretase trims proteins in the cell and plays an important role in Alzheimer's disease

Vaults

June 2009

Cells build huge vault containers constructed of a symmetric arrangement of many subunits

Influenza Neuraminidase

May 2009

Neuraminidase is an important target for influenza drugs

Oct and Sox Transcription Factors

April 2009

Transcription factors decide when particular genes will be transcribed

Hydrogenase

March 2009

Hydrogenases use unusual metal ions to split hydrogen gas

Auxin and TIR1 Ubiquitin Ligase

February 2009

The plant hormone auxin controls growth and response to light and gravity

Tobacco Mosaic Virus

January 2009

A cylindrical arrangement of proteins protects a long strand of RNA in TMV

Hsp90

December 2008

Heat shock proteins ensure that proteins remain folded and active under harsh conditions

Mechanosensitive Channels

November 2008

Pressure-sensitive channels open when the internal pressure of a cell gets too high

Poly(A) Polymerase

October 2008

Poly(A) polymerase adds a long tail of adenine nucleotides at the end of messenger RNA

Ribonuclease A

September 2008

Ribonuclease cuts and controls RNA

Selenocysteine Synthase

August 2008

Selenium is used in place of sulfur to build proteins for special tasks

Dengue Virus

July 2008

Atomic structures of dengue virus are giving new hope for creation of a vaccine

Lactate Dehydrogenase

June 2008

Our cells temporarily build lactate when supplies of oxygen are low

Prions

May 2008

Mad cow disease is caused by prion proteins that misfold and aggregate

Adrenergic Receptors

April 2008

Adrenaline stimulates a G-protein-coupled receptor, priming us for action

Cadherin

March 2008

Adhesive cadherin proteins hold neighboring cells together

Small Interfering RNA (siRNA)

February 2008

Our cells continually look for pieces of double-stranded RNA, a possible sign of viral infection

Circadian Clock Proteins

January 2008

Circadian clock proteins measure time in our cells

Oxidosqualene Cyclase

December 2007

Oxidosqualine cyclase forms the unusual fused rings of cholesterol molecules

Multidrug Resistance Transporters

November 2007

Many bacteria use multidrug resistance transporters to pump drugs and poisons out of the cell

Superoxide Dismutase

October 2007

Superoxide dismutase protects us from dangerously reactive forms of oxygen

Citrate Synthase

September 2007

Citrate synthase opens and closes around its substrates as part of the citric acid cycle

Anabolic Steroids

August 2007

Anabolic steroids like testosterone are among the most common performance enhancing drugs

Thymine Dimers

July 2007

Ultraviolet light damages our DNA, but our cells have ways to correct the damage

Fatty Acid Synthase

June 2007

Fatty acids are constructed in many sequential steps by a large protein complex

Aconitase and Iron Regulatory Protein 1

May 2007

Aconitase performs a reaction in the citric acid cycle, and moonlights as a regulatory protein

Clathrin

April 2007

Three-armed clathrin triskelions are used to build molecular cages involved in transport

Zinc Fingers

March 2007

Zinc ions are used to strengthen small protein modules that recognize DNA

Exosomes

February 2007

Exosomes destroy messenger RNA molecules after they have finished their jobs

Importins

January 2007

Importins deliver proteins into the nucleus through the nuclear pore complex

Transposase

December 2006

Transposases shift genes around in the genome

Fibrin

November 2006

Rod-shaped fibrin molecules link together to form blood clots

Cytochrome p450

October 2006

Cytochrome p450 detoxifies and solubilizes drugs and poisons by modifying them with oxygen

Elongation Factors

September 2006

Protein synthesis requires the assistance of several elongation factors that guide each step

AAA+ Proteases

August 2006

AAA+ proteases are ATP-powered molecular motors that thread protein chains through a hole

Amyloid-beta Precursor Protein

July 2006

Cell-clogging amyloids form when proteins improperly aggregate

Luciferase

June 2006

Organisms from fireflies to bacteria use luciferase to emit light

Glucose Oxidase

May 2006

Glucose oxidase measures blood glucose level in biosensors

Hemagglutinin

April 2006

Influenza virus binds to cells and infects them using hemagglutinin

Tissue Factor

March 2006

Tissue factor senses damage to the body and triggers formation of a blood clot

Alpha-amylase

February 2006

Amylases digest starch to produce glucose

Topoisomerases

January 2006

Topoisomerases untangle and reduce the tension of DNA strands in the cell

ATP Synthase

December 2005

ATP synthase links two rotary motors to generate ATP

Acetylcholine Receptor

November 2005

The neurotransmitter acetylcholine opens a protein channel, stimulating muscle contraction

Designer Proteins

October 2005

Researchers have successfully designed entirely new proteins based on biological principles

Cholera Toxin

September 2005

Many bacterial toxins have two parts: one that finds a cell, the other that kills it

Neurotrophins

August 2005

Neurotrophins guide the development of the nervous system

TATA-Binding Protein

July 2005

TATA protein tells RNA polymerase where to get started on a gene

Carotenoid Oxygenase

June 2005

Light-sensing retinal molecules are built from colorful carotenoids in our diet

Self-splicing RNA

May 2005

Special sequences of RNA are able to splice themselves

Kinesin

April 2005

The motor protein kinesin carries cellular cargo along microtubules

T-Cell Receptor

March 2005

Lymphocytes use T-cell receptors to patrol the body for foreign molecules

Major Histocompatibility Complex

February 2005

MHC displays peptides on the surfaces of cells, allowing the immune system to sense the infection inside

Phenylalanine Hydroxylase

January 2005

An unusual cofactor is used in the synthesis of aromatic amino acids

Ubiquitin

December 2004

Ubiquitin is used to tag obsolete proteins for destruction

Photosystem II

November 2004

Photosystem II captures the energy from sunlight and uses it to extract electrons from water molecules

G Proteins

October 2004

G proteins receive signals from cellular receptors and deliver them inside the cell

Catalase

September 2004

Catalase protects us from dangerous reactive oxidizing molecules

Caspases

August 2004

Caspases disassemble proteins during the process of programmed cell death

DNA Ligase

July 2004

DNA ligase reconnects broken DNA strands, and is used to engineer recombinant DNA

Acetylcholinesterase

June 2004

Acetylcholinesterase stops the signal between a nerve cell and a muscle cell

Serpins

May 2004

Serpins are traps that capture dangerous proteases

Growth Hormone

April 2004

Growth hormone brings together two copies of its cellular receptor

Calcium Pump

March 2004

Atomic structures have captured the calcium pump in action

Glycolytic Enzymes

February 2004

The ten enzymes of glycolysis break down sugar in our diet

Carbonic Anhydrase

January 2004

Carbonic anhydrase solubilizes carbon dioxide gas so we can breathe it out

Catabolite Activator Protein

December 2003

CAP senses the level of sugar and mobilizes the proteins needed to utilize it

Simian Virus 40

November 2003

SV40 hijacks the cells it infects using only a handful of proteins

Trypsin

October 2003

An activated serine amino acid in trypsin cleaves protein chains

Estrogen Receptor

September 2003

Estrogen binds to receptors in the nucleus and affects key genes in development

Calmodulin

August 2003

Calcium ions rapidly deliver signals to control processes such as muscle contraction, nerve signaling, and fertilization

Src Tyrosine Kinase

July 2003

Growth signaling proteins play an important role in the development of cancer

Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP)

June 2003

A tiny fluorescent protein from jellyfish has revolutionized cell biology

Hemoglobin

May 2003

Hemoglobin uses a change in shape to increase the efficiency of oxygen transport

RNA Polymerase

April 2003

RNA polymerase transcribes genetic information from DNA into RNA

lac Repressor

March 2003

A genetic circuit controls the production of lactose-utilizing enzymes in bacteria

Potassium Channels

February 2003

Potassium channels allow potassium ions to pass, but block smaller sodium ions

Serum Albumin

January 2003

Serum albumin delivers fatty acid molecules through the bloodstream

Cytochrome c

December 2002

Cytochrome c shuttles electrons during the production of cellular energy

Ferritin and Transferrin

November 2002

Ferritin and transferrin manage our essential stores of iron ions

Dihydrofolate Reductase

October 2002

DHFR is a target for cancer chemotherapy and bacterial infection

HIV Reverse Transcriptase

September 2002

HIV builds a DNA copy of its RNA genome, providing a unique target for drug therapy

Chaperones

August 2002

Chaperones help new proteins fold into their proper shape

p53 Tumor Suppressor

July 2002

p53 tumor suppressor protects the body from DNA damage and cancer

Glutamine Synthetase

June 2002

Glutamine synthetase monitors the levels of nitrogen-rich amino acids and decides when to make more

Penicillin-binding Proteins

May 2002

Penicillin attacks the proteins that build bacterial cell walls

Anthrax Toxin

April 2002

Anthrax bacteria build a deadly three-part toxin

Bacteriorhodopsin

March 2002

Bacteriorhodopsin pumps protons powered by green sunlight

Nitrogenase

February 2002

Nitrogenase uses an exotic cluster of metals to fix atmospheric nitrogen into bioavailable ammonia

Thrombin

January 2002

Thrombin activates the molecule that forms blood clots

Glycogen Phosphorylase

December 2001

Glycogen phosphorylase releases sugar from its cellular storehouse

DNA

November 2001

Atomic structures reveal how the iconic double helix encodes genomic information

Photosystem I

October 2001

Photosystem I captures the energy in sunlight

Antibodies

September 2001

Antibodies search for foreign molecules in the blood

Poliovirus and Rhinovirus

August 2001

Crystallographic structures reveal the atomic details of viruses and how to fight them

Actin

July 2001

Cells are supported by a cytoskeleton of protein filaments

Myosin

June 2001

Molecular motors fueled by ATP power the contraction of muscles

Cyclooxygenase

May 2001

Aspirin attacks an important enzyme in pain signaling and blood clotting

Aminoacyl-tRNA Synthetases

April 2001

Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases ensure that the proper amino acids are used to build proteins

Transfer RNA

March 2001

Transfer RNA translates the language of the genome into the language of proteins

Insulin

February 2001

The hormone insulin helps control the level of glucose in the blood

Alcohol Dehydrogenase

January 2001

Alcohol dehydrogenase detoxifies the ethanol we drink

Pepsin

December 2000

Pepsin digests proteins in strong stomach acid

Rubisco

November 2000

Rubisco fixes atmospheric carbon dioxide into bioavailable sugar molecules

Ribosomal Subunits

October 2000

Atomic structures of the ribosomal subunits reveal a central role for RNA in protein synthesis

Lysozyme

September 2000

Lysozyme attacks the cell walls of bacteria

Restriction Enzymes

August 2000

Bacterial enzymes that cut DNA are useful tools for genetic engineering

Nucleosome

July 2000

The cell's genome is stored and protected by nucleosomes

HIV-1 Protease

June 2000

Atomic structures of HIV protease have been used to design powerful drugs for HIV therapy

Cytochrome c Oxidase

May 2000

Cytochrome oxidase extracts energy from food using oxygen

Collagen

April 2000

Sturdy fibers of collagen give structure to our bodies

DNA Polymerase

March 2000

DNA polymerase makes an accurate copy of the cell's genome

Bacteriophage phiX174

February 2000

Bacteriophage phiX174 hijacks bacterial cells and forces them to make new copies of the virus

Myoglobin

January 2000

Myoglobin was the first protein to have its atomic structure determined, revealing how it stores oxygen in muscle cells.

About Molecule of the Month
The RCSB PDB Molecule of the Month by David S. Goodsell (The Scripps Research Institute and the RCSB PDB) presents short accounts on selected molecules from the Protein Data Bank. Each installment includes an introduction to the structure and function of the molecule, a discussion of the relevance of the molecule to human health and welfare, and suggestions for how visitors might view these structures and access further details.More

About PDB-101

Researchers around the globe make 3D structures freely available from the Protein Data Bank (PDB) archive. PDB-101 training materials help graduate students, postdoctoral scholars, and researchers use PDB data and RCSB PDB tools. Outreach content demonstrate how PDB data impact fundamental biology, biomedicine, bioengineering/biotechnology, and energy sciences in 3D by a multidisciplinary user community. Education Materials provide lessons and activities for teaching and learning.

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RCSB PDB Core Operations are funded by theU.S. National Science Foundation (DBI-2321666), theUS Department of Energy (DE-SC0019749), and theNational Cancer Institute,National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, andNational Institute of General Medical Sciences of theNational Institutes of Health under grant R01GM157729.


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