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Structure of the first representative of Pfam family PF09410 (DUF2006) reveals a structural signature of the calycin superfamily that suggests a role in lipid metabolism

Authors :
Jessica Paulsen
Arne Skerra
Marc-André Elsliger
Marc C. Deller
Edward Nigoghossian
Thomas Clayton
Christopher L. Rife
Andrew T. Morse
Mark W. Knuth
Lian Duan
Polat Abdubek
Constantina Bakolitsa
Gye Won Han
Sanjay Krishna
Hsiu-Ju Chiu
Heath E. Klock
Julie Feuerhelm
Abhinav Kumar
Adam Godzik
John Wooley
Keith O. Hodgson
Andrei L. Lomize
Daniel McMullan
Q. Xu
Linda Okach
Tamara Astakhova
Henry van den Bedem
Piotr Kozbial
Kevin K. Jin
Mitchell D. Miller
Lukasz Jaroszewski
Slawomir K. Grzechnik
Ron Reyes
Dana Weekes
Dennis Carlton
Scott A. Lesley
Herbert L. Axelrod
David Marciano
Joanna C Grant
Ashley M. Deacon
Ian A. Wilson
Source :
Acta crystallographica. Section F, Structural biology and crystallization communications, vol 66, iss Pt 10, Acta Crystallographica Section F: Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2010.

Abstract

NE1406, the first structural representative of PF09410, reveals a lipocalin-like fold with features that suggest involvement in lipid metabolism. In addition, NE1406 provides potential structural templates for two other protein families (PF07143 and PF08622).<br />The first structural representative of the domain of unknown function DUF2006 family, also known as Pfam family PF09410, comprises a lipocalin-like fold with domain duplication. The finding of the calycin signature in the N-­terminal domain, combined with remote sequence similarity to two other protein families (PF07143 and PF08622) implicated in isoprenoid metabolism and the oxidative stress response, support an involvement in lipid metabolism. Clusters of conserved residues that interact with ligand mimetics suggest that the binding and regulation sites map to the N-terminal domain and to the interdomain interface, respectively.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta crystallographica. Section F, Structural biology and crystallization communications, vol 66, iss Pt 10, Acta Crystallographica Section F: Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4fb23b939cebf572cfac4357f97a448e