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PDBsum entry 4w8f
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Motor protein
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PDB id
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4w8f
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PDB id:
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Motor protein
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Title:
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Crystal structure of the dynein motor domain in the amppnp-bound state
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Structure:
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Dynein heavy chain lysozyme chimera. Chain: a, b. Synonym: dynein heavy chain,cytosolic,dyhc,lysis protein,muramidase. Engineered: yes. Mutation: yes
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Source:
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae, enterobacteria phage t4. Baker's yeast. Organism_taxid: 559292, 10665. Strain: atcc 204508 / s288c. Gene: dyn1, dhc1, ykr054c. Expressed in: saccharomyces cerevisiae. Expression_system_taxid: 4932
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Resolution:
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3.54Å
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R-factor:
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0.230
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R-free:
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0.262
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Authors:
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H.-C.Cheng,G.Bhabha,N.Zhang,R.D.Vale
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Key ref:
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G.Bhabha
et al.
(2014).
Allosteric communication in the dynein motor domain.
Cell,
159,
857-868.
PubMed id:
DOI:
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Date:
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24-Aug-14
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Release date:
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12-Nov-14
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PROCHECK
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Headers
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References
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Enzyme class:
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E.C.3.2.1.17
- lysozyme.
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Reaction:
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Hydrolysis of the 1,4-beta-linkages between N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid in peptidoglycan heteropolymers of the prokaryotes cell walls.
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DOI no:
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Cell
159:857-868
(2014)
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PubMed id:
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Allosteric communication in the dynein motor domain.
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G.Bhabha,
H.C.Cheng,
N.Zhang,
A.Moeller,
M.Liao,
J.A.Speir,
Y.Cheng,
R.D.Vale.
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ABSTRACT
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Dyneins power microtubule motility using ring-shaped, AAA-containing motor
domains. Here, we report X-ray and electron microscopy (EM) structures of yeast
dynein bound to different ATP analogs, which collectively provide insight into
the roles of dynein's two major ATPase sites, AAA1 and AAA3, in the
conformational change mechanism. ATP binding to AAA1 triggers a cascade of
conformational changes that propagate to all six AAA domains and cause a large
movement of the "linker," dynein's mechanical element. In contrast to
the role of AAA1 in driving motility, nucleotide transitions in AAA3 gate the
transmission of conformational changes between AAA1 and the linker, suggesting
that AAA3 acts as a regulatory switch. Further structural and mutational studies
also uncover a role for the linker in regulating the catalytic cycle of AAA1.
Together, these results reveal how dynein's two major ATP-binding sites initiate
and modulate conformational changes in the motor domain during motility.
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');
}
}
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