"Stick" image of the cyclol "fabric" proposed by Dorothy Maud Wrinch in 1936 (Nature, _137_, 411-412). This fabric is characterized by large "lacunae" arranged in a hexagonal pattern, in which three Cβ and three Hα converge on a (relatively) empty spot in the fabric. The two sides of the fabric are not equivalent; all the Cβ atoms emerge from the same side, which is the "upper" side here. The red atoms represent hydroxyl groups (not carbonyl groups) and emerge (in sets of three) from both sides of the fabric. The PDB file was constructed by me using my own software and visualized using PyMol; both were done on 20 October 2006. I hereby release this image under the GFDL.
Date
20 October 2006 (original upload date)
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No machine-readable source provided. Own work assumed (based on copyright claims).
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No machine-readable author provided. WillowW assumed (based on copyright claims).
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"Stick" image of the cyclol "fabric" proposed by Dorothy Maud Wrinch in 1936 (Nature, _137_, 411-412). This fabric is characterized by large "lacunae" arranged in a hexagonal pattern, in which three C<sup>β</sup> and three H<sup>α</sup> converge on a (