About: Intro Puzzles/Lock and Lower   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The goal is to pull all five sheets together into one unit. The first step is to draw bands between the out-of-line sheet and the sheet on either side. Here you'll probably need five or six bands between each sheet. It will probably help to rotate the protein, by clicking and dragging on the white background, before trying to draw bands. If you want, you can draw bands between the bonded sheet instead of freezing. You don't necessarily need to band every hydrogen bond, but at least three or four bands for each pair of sheets is a good idea.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Intro Puzzles/Lock and Lower
rdfs:comment
  • The goal is to pull all five sheets together into one unit. The first step is to draw bands between the out-of-line sheet and the sheet on either side. Here you'll probably need five or six bands between each sheet. It will probably help to rotate the protein, by clicking and dragging on the white background, before trying to draw bands. If you want, you can draw bands between the bonded sheet instead of freezing. You don't necessarily need to band every hydrogen bond, but at least three or four bands for each pair of sheets is a good idea.
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • The goal is to pull all five sheets together into one unit. The first step is to draw bands between the out-of-line sheet and the sheet on either side. Here you'll probably need five or six bands between each sheet. It will probably help to rotate the protein, by clicking and dragging on the white background, before trying to draw bands. If you wiggle after drawing bands, you'll probably see the sheets that are already bonded start to pull apart, breaking the hydrogen bonds. This is where freezing comes in handy. If you double-click on a sheet, the sheet freezes, which prevents it from changing shape. In this case, freezing should keep the bonded sheets bonded. If you want, you can draw bands between the bonded sheet instead of freezing. You don't necessarily need to band every hydrogen bond, but at least three or four bands for each pair of sheets is a good idea. As usual, wiggle and shake to finish. If results are good, you raise your score by unfreezing with the "Unfreeze Protein" button (keyboard shortcut "f"), followed by another round of wiggle-shake-wiggle. Finally, remove bands with the "Remove Bands" button (keyboard shortcut "r") and then wiggle-shake-wiggle one last time. Technical stuff: this protein looks a more realistic than some of the earlier examples. Level 3-3.png|Previous: Level 3-3: Sheets and Ladders|link=Intro_Puzzles/Sheets_and_Ladders Level 3-5.png|Next: Level 3-5: Remix|link=Intro_Puzzles/Remix
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