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PDB-101 Focus: Peak Performance

06/10 PDB101 News

Since 2014, PDB-101 has focused on different topics to help build a collection molecular stories around a particular theme. Past topics have included cancer and diabetes.

In 2025, PDB-101 will highlight the structural stories of Peak Performance: the structural biology of athletics and well-being.

Athletes require bodies that are the best that is possible, all the way from molecules to muscles. By understanding the structure and function of our molecules, athletes can ensure that they are performing at their peak. This knowledge also informs the ways that we all can live our best lives, at all stages of our lives.

Visit the PDB-101 Peak Performance Browser for resources such as:

<I>The liver absorbs vitamin E from the diet and selectively releases a specific form, alpha-tocopherol (pink), back into the bloodstream. alpha-Tocopherol transfer protein (yellow) is responsible for recognizing, storing, and transporting alpha-tocopherol out of liver cells. From there, alpha-tocopherol is carried to various parts of the body, functioning as an antioxidant and an immune system enhancer, among many other roles.









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Visit the <B>2025 Calendar: The Structural Biology of Nutrition</B> to learn more.<BR>
Illustration by RCSB PDB intern Xinyi Christine Zhang.
 </I>The liver absorbs vitamin E from the diet and selectively releases a specific form, alpha-tocopherol (pink), back into the bloodstream. alpha-Tocopherol transfer protein (yellow) is responsible for recognizing, storing, and transporting alpha-tocopherol out of liver cells. From there, alpha-tocopherol is carried to various parts of the body, functioning as an antioxidant and an immune system enhancer, among many other roles.
Visit the 2025 Calendar: The Structural Biology of Nutrition to learn more.
Illustration by RCSB PDB intern Xinyi Christine Zhang.

Learn more in Molecule of the Month: Vitamins

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