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Nature 437, 197-198 (8 September 2005) | doi:10.1038/437197a; Published online 7 September 2005
Structural biology: Fibres hinge on swapped domains
Andrew D. Miranker1
Abstract
When proteins assemble themselves into fibres, there can be grave pathological consequences. Designing an otherwise soluble protein to make fibres provides a general mechanism for the construction process.
DNA encodes RNA, which encodes protein — this 'central dogma', coined by Francis Crick in 1958, underpins modern molecular biology1. Implicit in this formula is the tenet that a linear chain of amino acids contains the complete instructions to form a three-dimensional protein structure.
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