 |
InterPro: IPR018082 AmbAllergen
Protein matches
|
UniProtKB Matches: 307 proteins |
|
Accession
|
IPR018082 AmbAllergen |
Type
|
Family |
Signatures
|
|
InterPro Relationships
|
|
Parent
|
IPR012334 Pectin lyase fold
|
|
Contains
|
IPR002022 Pectate lyase/Amb allergen
IPR006626 Parallel beta-helix repeat
|
|
InterPro annotation
|
|
Entry Details in BioMart
|
Abstract
|
Pectate lyase EC:4.2.2.2 is an enzyme involved in the maceration and soft rotting of plant tissue.
Pectate lyase is responsible for the eliminative cleavage of pectate,
yielding oligosaccharides with 4-deoxy-alpha-D-mann-4-enuronosyl groups
at their non-reducing ends. The protein is maximally expressed late in
pollen development. It has been suggested that the pollen expression of
pectate lyase genes might relate to a requirement for pectin degradation
during pollen tube growth [1].
The structure and the folding kinetics of one member of this family, pectate lyase C
(pelC)1 from Erwinia chrysanthemi has been investigated in some detail [2,3]. PelC contains a parallel beta-helix folding motif. The majority of the regular secondary structure is composed of parallel beta-sheets (about
30%). The individual strands of the sheets are connected by unordered loops of varying length. The backbone is then formed by a large helix composed of beta-sheets. There are two disulphide bonds in pelC and 12 proline residues. One of these prolines, Pro220, is involved in a cis peptide bond. he folding mechanism of pelC involves two slow phases that have been attributed to proline isomerization.
Some of the proteins in this family are allergens. Allergies are hypersensitivity reactions of the immune system to specific substances called allergens (such as pollen, stings, drugs, or food) that, in most people, result in no symptoms. A nomenclature system has been established for antigens (allergens) that cause IgE-mediated atopic allergies in humans [WHO/IUIS Allergen Nomenclature Subcommittee
King T.P., Hoffmann D., Loewenstein H., Marsh D.G., Platts-Mills T.A.E.,
Thomas W. Bull. World Health Organ. 72:797-806(1994)]. This nomenclature system is defined by a designation that is composed of
the first three letters of the genus; a space; the first letter of the
species name; a space and an arabic number. In the event that two species
names have identical designations, they are discriminated from one another
by adding one or more letters (as necessary) to each species designation.
The allergens in this family include allergens with the following designations: Amb a 1, Amb a 2, Amb a 3, Cha o 1, Cup a 1, Cry j 1, Jun a 1.
Two of the major allergens in the pollen of short ragweed (Ambrosia
artemisiifolia) are Amb aI and Amb aII. The primary structure of Amb aII
has been deduced and has been shown to share ~65% sequence identity with
the Amb alpha I multigene family of allergens [4]. Members of the Amb aI/aII
family include Nicotiana tabacum (Common tobacco) pectate lyase, which is similar to the deduced amino
acid sequences of two pollen-specific pectate lyase genes identified in
Solanum lycopersicum (Tomato) (Lycopersicon esculentum) [5]; Cry jI, a major allergenic glycoprotein of Cryptomeria japonica (Japanese cedar) - the most common pollen allergen in Japan [6]; and P56 and P59, which share sequence similarity with pectate lyases of plant
pathogenic bacteria [1].
|
Structural links
|
|
Publications
|
|
1.
|
Wing RA, Yamaguchi J, Larabell SK, Ursin VM, McCormick S.
Molecular and genetic characterization of two pollen-expressed genes that have sequence similarity to pectate lyases of the plant pathogen Erwinia.
Plant Mol. Biol. 14 17-28 1990
[PubMed: 1983191]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00015651
|
|
2.
|
Kamen DE, Woody RW.
Folding kinetics of the protein pectate lyase C reveal fast-forming intermediates and slow proline isomerization.
Biochemistry 41 4713-23 2002
[PubMed: 11926834]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi0115129
|
|
3.
|
Yoder MD, Keen NT, Jurnak F.
New domain motif: the structure of pectate lyase C, a secreted plant virulence factor.
Science 260 1503-7 1993
[PubMed: 8502994]
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/260/5113/1503
|
|
4.
|
Rogers BL, Morgenstern JP, Griffith IJ, Yu XB, Counsell CM, Brauer AW, King TP, Garman RD, Kuo MC.
Complete sequence of the allergen Amb alpha II. Recombinant expression and reactivity with T cells from ragweed allergic patients.
J. Immunol. 147 2547-52 1991
[PubMed: 1717566]
http://www.jimmunol.org/cgi/reprint/147/8/2547
|
|
5.
|
Rogers HJ, Harvey A, Lonsdale DM.
Isolation and characterization of a tobacco gene with homology to pectate lyase which is specifically expressed during microsporogenesis.
Plant Mol. Biol. 20 493-502 1992
[PubMed: 1421152]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00040608
|
|
6.
|
Hijikata A, Matsumoto I, Kojima K, Ogawa H.
Antigenicity of the oligosaccharide moiety of the Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) pollen allergen, Cry jI.
Int. Arch. Allergy Immunol. 105 198-202 1994
[PubMed: 7920021]
|
|
|
InterPro 23.1
|