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InterPro: IPR004089 Chemotaxis methyl-accepting receptor, signalling
Protein matches
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UniProtKB Matches: 14833 proteins |
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Accession
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IPR004089 Chemotax_Me-accpt_rcpt_sig |
Secondary
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IPR000122
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Type
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Domain |
Signatures
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InterPro Relationships
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Found in
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IPR004090 Chemotaxis methyl-accepting receptor
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Contains
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IPR004091 Chemotaxis methyl-accepting receptor, methyl-accepting site
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GO Term annotation
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Process
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GO:0006935 chemotaxis
GO:0007165 signal transduction
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Function
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GO:0004871 signal transducer activity
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Component
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GO:0016020 membrane
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InterPro annotation
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Entry Details in BioMart
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Abstract
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Methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) are a family of bacterial receptors that mediate chemotaxis to diverse signals, responding to changes in the concentration of attractants and repellents in the environment by altering swimming behaviour [1]. Environmental diversity gives rise to diversity in bacterial signalling receptors, and consequently there are many genes encoding MCPs [2]. For example, there are four well-characterised MCPs found in Escherichia coli: Tar (taxis towards aspartate and maltose, away from nickel and cobalt), Tsr (taxis towards serine, away from leucine, indole and weak acids), Trg (taxis towards galactose and ribose) and Tap (taxis towards dipeptides).
MCPs share similar topology and signalling mechanisms. MCPs either bind ligands directly or interact with ligand-binding proteins, transducing the signal to downstream signalling proteins in the cytoplasm. MCPs undergo two covalent modifications: deamidation and reversible methylation at a number of glutamate residues. Attractants increase the level of methylation, while repellents decrease it. The methyl groups are added by the methyl-transferase cheR and are removed by the methylesterase cheB. Most MCPs are homodimers that contain the following organisation: an N-terminal signal sequence that acts as a transmembrane domain in the mature protein; a poorly-conserved periplasmic receptor (ligand-binding) domain; a second transmembrane domain; and a highly-conserved C-terminal cytoplasmic domain that interacts with downstream signalling components. The C-terminal domain contains the glycosylated glutamate residues.
This entry represents the signalling domain found in several methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins. This domain is thought to transduce the signal to CheA since it is highly conserved in very diverse MCPs.
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Structural links
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Database links
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Additional Reading
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Dahl MK, Boos W, Manson MD.
Evolution of chemotactic-signal transducers in enteric bacteria.
J. Bacteriol. 171 1989 2361-71
[PubMed: 2496104]
http://ukpmc.ac.uk/picrender.cgi?tool=EBI&pubmedid=2496104&action=stream&blobtype=pdf
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Hazelbauer GL.
The bacterial chemosensory system.
Can. J. Microbiol. 34 1988 466-74
[PubMed: 3052756]
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Hanlon DW, Marquez-Magana LM, Carpenter PB, Chamberlin MJ, Ordal GW.
Sequence and characterization of Bacillus subtilis CheW.
J. Biol. Chem. 267 1992 12055-60
[PubMed: 1601874]
http://intl.jbc.org/cgi/reprint/267/17/12055.pdf
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Rice MS, Dahlquist FW.
Sites of deamidation and methylation in Tsr, a bacterial chemotaxis sensory transducer.
J. Biol. Chem. 266 1991 9746-53
[PubMed: 2033064]
http://intl.jbc.org/cgi/reprint/266/15/9746.pdf
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Park SY, Borbat PP, Gonzalez-Bonet G, Bhatnagar J, Pollard AM, Freed JH, Bilwes AM, Crane BR.
Reconstruction of the chemotaxis receptor-kinase assembly.
Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 13 2006 400-7
[PubMed: 16622408]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nsmb1085
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Kim KK, Yokota H, Kim SH.
Four-helical-bundle structure of the cytoplasmic domain of a serine chemotaxis receptor.
Nature 400 1999 787-92
[PubMed: 10466731]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/23512
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Yamamoto K, Imae Y.
Cloning and characterization of the Salmonella typhimurium-specific chemoreceptor Tcp for taxis to citrate and from phenol.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90 1993 217-21
[PubMed: 8419927]
http://ukpmc.ac.uk/picrender.cgi?tool=EBI&pubmedid=8419927&action=stream&blobtype=pdf
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InterPro 24.0
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