Mithrandir wrote:I am confused about how you determine which ends the blue cap and red cap go on. Can somebody explain this to me?
The blue cap goes on the amino terminus: the low-numbered end. The red cap goes on the carboxy terminus: the high-numbered end.
Here's an easy mnemonic to remember this: In alphabetical order, you go from
blue to
red, so the blue one goes at the beginning (low number), and the red one goes at the end (high number). This also works for remembering which end is amino and which is carboxy;
amino comes before
carboxy alphabetically, so the amino terminus is the end with the lower number and the carboxy terminus is the end with the higher number.
To find them in Jmol, you can just look at the little info box on the side of the online competition environment (or the sheet that came with the Toobers, or the CBM site, or any of the various other places that mention this) and use the numbers it says (e.g., this year's prebuild says 148-296 for chain A, and 310-401 for chain B, so you'd use 148 and 296 as the ends for A and 310 and 401 as the ends for B).
Then use the commands:
select *a and 148
color blue
select *a and 296
color red
select *b and 310
color blue
select *b and 401
color red
That will show you where the ends are in the 3D structure, and will also make them the right colors.
Allinea wrote:The way I figure it in Jmol:
color group
After that, hover over one end to figure out the amino acid number and the cap of the same color on that end, other cap on the other end. Sometimes the chain ends before both red and blue are present, and you just have to go on whatever color is there (red or blue)... unless I've been doing it wrong all season.

That's a perfectly fine way of doing it, too, but this way doesn't involve the guesswork of making sure you've found the end and that you're interpreting the colors correctly (especially since sometimes neither red nor blue is present, particularly when you're looking at a fragment of a protein rather than a whole one). "color group" could still be the easiest way if you didn't know what the numbers of the ends of the chains were.
gsheni wrote:I have done some heavy research and it says that there should be two zinc ions on Chain E and F?
But Phenylethylamine said there should be one?
There are two zinc ions if you count chain E and chain F together, because there is one zinc ion in
each. If you don't believe me, you can try this in Jmol:
select zn (you should get the message "2 atoms selected")
spacefill 400
color red (to make them more visible)
You should then see one bright red zinc ion in chain E, and one bright red zinc ion in chain F.
bloopy wrote:Oh alright, thank you so much! I thought there were disulfide bonds in the structure since I read somewhere that there was... but I went back and reread my sources and I've realized what a stupid mistake I made since it was MHC that had the disulfide bonds, not Caspase 3.
In that case, if anyone is willing to offer some information, are there any important bonds in Caspase 3? I've got a lot of "within the cell as a whole" addons (such as the other proteins involved in the immune system) but nothing specific to the structure within Caspase 3.
Before you get into looking at specific bonds, I recommend going for important sidechains – in particular, the active site machinery of the protein. There have been some posts about it before in this thread, but you can also look at the
Wikipedia article on caspase-3, which specifically mentions the most important active site residues.