Loading...
Custom Services order now ship next day

AdV hexon protein

The hexon protein is a major coat protein found in Adenoviruses. Hexon coat proteins are synthesised during late infection and form homo-trimers. The 240 copies of the hexon trimer that are produced are organised so that 12 lie on each of the 20 facets. The central 9 hexons in a facet are cemented together by 12 copies of polypeptide IX. The penton complex, formed by the peripentonal hexons and base hexon (holding in place a fibre), lie at each of the 12 vertices. The hexon coat protein is a duplication consisting of two domains with a similar fold packed together like the nucleoplasmin subunits. Within a hexon trimer, the domains are arranged around a pseudo 6-fold axis. The domains have a beta-sandwich structure consisting of 8 strands in two sheets with a jelly-roll topology; each domain is heavily decorated with many insertions. Some hexon proteins contain a distinct C-terminal domain.

Our customer service representatives are available 24 hours a day, from Monday to Sunday. Contact Us

Can't find the products you're looking for? Try to filter in the left sidebar.Filter By Tag

For Research Use Only. Not For Clinical Use.

© 2024 Creative Biolabs.
  • 0
  • 0
Cart

    Go to compare