Of course, "oligomer" (pure Greek) usually does that kind of job, but not in
this specific case, since oligo means few and in this case we have "endless"
chains.
I can only think of the neologism "myriomer" for this particular case, if
you want to stick to Greek. Myrioi can mean 10000 or countless, depending on
where you accent the word!
If that catches on, remember you (probably) saw it here first!
Cheers,
Emmanuel
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tim Gruene" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Monday, June 18, 2012 5:43 PM
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] do you think it is interesting?
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> [...]
>> of monomers is called a multimer, not a polymer.
> [...]
> shiver - what a terrible mixture of languages. 'multi-' has got latin
> origin, whereas both poly and mer have got greek origin, and I don't
> think one should mix these. Please!!! think of a different _GREEK_
> syllable to express what you describe as 'multimer'.
>
> Cheers,
> Tim
>
> On 06/18/12 16:21, David Schuller wrote:
>> Certainly it's interesting, but I think your description is
>> inaccurate.
>>
>> "Endless linear polymers" - Each monomer is a polymer, but a
>> collection of monomers is called a multimer, not a polymer.
>>
>> I don't suppose there are any knots? That would be really
>> interesting.
>>
>> On 06/18/12 09:49, anna anna wrote:
>>> Hi all! I'd like your opinion about a structure I solved. Apart
>>> from protein structure itself, I think that my protein xtallized
>>> in an odd way! The biological unit is a dimer while the
>>> asymmetric unit is a tetramer (red cartoon in the figure)
>>> resulting from domain swapping between two dimers. The strange
>>> thing is that swapping connects infinite monomers and, rather
>>> than a xtal, my diffracting object seems a multilayer of endless
>>> linear polymers, a kind of papyrus with greek fret-like fibers.
>>> The figure shows the orientation of the polymers in each layer.
>>> I'd like to know if some of you have already seen a similar
>>> pattern or it is weird as I think! I'm further racking my brain
>>> to figure out a biological implication of this behaviour, I
>>> thought something like plaque formation but I can't find support
>>> in literature.
>>>
>>> All suggestions are welcome!!
>>>
>>> Cheers, Anna
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
> - --
> - --
> Dr Tim Gruene
> Institut fuer anorganische Chemie
> Tammannstr. 4
> D-37077 Goettingen
>
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