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PDBsum entry 1v98
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Oxidoreductase
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PDB id
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1v98
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Contents |
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* Residue conservation analysis
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Enzyme class:
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E.C.1.8.1.9
- thioredoxin-disulfide reductase (NADPH).
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Reaction:
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[thioredoxin]-dithiol + NADP+ = [thioredoxin]-disulfide + NADPH + H+
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[thioredoxin]-dithiol
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+
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NADP(+)
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=
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[thioredoxin]-disulfide
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+
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NADPH
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+
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H(+)
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Molecule diagrams generated from .mol files obtained from the
KEGG ftp site
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DOI no:
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Proteins
61:1032-1037
(2005)
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PubMed id:
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Compact reduced thioredoxin structure from the thermophilic bacteria Thermus thermophilus.
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P.H.Rehse,
M.Kumei,
T.H.Tahirov.
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ABSTRACT
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The X-ray crystallographic structure of a thioredoxin from Thermus thermophilus
was solved to 1.8 A resolution by molecular replacement. The crystals' space
group was C2 with cell dimensions of a = 40.91, b = 95.44, c = 56.68 A, beta
=91.41 degrees, with two molecules in the asymmetric unit. Unlike the reported
thioredoxin structures, the biological unit of T. thermophilus thioredoxin is a
dimer both in solution and in the crystal. The fold conforms to the
"thioredoxin fold" that is common over a class of nine protein
families including thioredoxin; however, the folded portion of this protein is
much more compact than other thioredoxins previously solved by X-ray
crystallography being reduced by one alpha-helix and one beta-strand. As with
other thioredoxins, the active site is highly conserved even though the
variation in sequence can be quite large. The T. thermophilus thioredoxin has
some variability at the active site, especially compared with previously solved
structures from bacterial sources.
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Selected figure(s)
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Figure 2.
Figure 2. Dimer generated by monomers in the asymmetric unit
orientated to show loop penetration. Labeling convention is the
thioredoxin standard and therefore starts at 2
and 2.
The prime refers to the second monomer.
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Figure 4.
Figure 4. Active site of the T. thermophilus thioredoxin.
Residues in blue refer to the human structure, in red to A.
acidcaldarius. Residue labels correspond to the T. thermophilus
structure unless there is an h tag which refers to human.
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The above figures are
reprinted
by permission from John Wiley & Sons, Inc.:
Proteins
(2005,
61,
1032-1037)
copyright 2005.
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Figures were
selected
by an automated process.
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Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference
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PubMed id
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Reference
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E.Pedone,
D.Limauro,
and
S.Bartolucci
(2008).
The machinery for oxidative protein folding in thermophiles.
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Antioxid Redox Signal,
10,
157-170.
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P.Grimaldi,
M.R.Ruocco,
M.A.Lanzotti,
A.Ruggiero,
I.Ruggiero,
P.Arcari,
L.Vitagliano,
and
M.Masullo
(2008).
Characterisation of the components of the thioredoxin system in the archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus.
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Extremophiles,
12,
553-562.
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R.Bao,
Y.Chen,
Y.J.Tang,
J.Janin,
and
C.Z.Zhou
(2007).
Crystal structure of the yeast cytoplasmic thioredoxin Trx2.
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Proteins,
66,
246-249.
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PDB code:
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R.Bao,
Y.X.Chen,
Y.Zhang,
and
C.Z.Zhou
(2006).
Expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of mitochondrial thioredoxin Trx3 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
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Acta Crystallogr Sect F Struct Biol Cryst Commun,
62,
1161-1163.
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The most recent references are shown first.
Citation data come partly from CiteXplore and partly
from an automated harvesting procedure. Note that this is likely to be
only a partial list as not all journals are covered by
either method. However, we are continually building up the citation data
so more and more references will be included with time.
Where a reference describes a PDB structure, the PDB
code is
shown on the right.
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