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PDBsum entry 4xoi

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protein ligands metals Protein-protein interface(s) links
Cell cycle PDB id
4xoi

 

 

 

 

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JSmol PyMol  
Contents
Protein chains
177 a.a.
210 a.a.
Ligands
GTP ×2
Metals
_MG ×2
Waters ×417
PDB id:
4xoi
Name: Cell cycle
Title: Structure of hsanillin bound with rhoa(q63l) at 2.1 angstroms resolution
Structure: Transforming protein rhoa. Chain: a, c. Fragment: unp residues 1-180. Synonym: rho cdna clone 12,h12. Engineered: yes. Mutation: yes. Actin-binding protein anillin. Chain: b, d. Fragment: rbd domain, unp residues 712-981.
Source: Homo sapiens. Human. Organism_taxid: 9606. Gene: rhoa, arh12, arha, rho12. Expressed in: escherichia coli. Expression_system_taxid: 562. Gene: anln.
Resolution:
2.09Å     R-factor:   0.174     R-free:   0.206
Authors: L.Sun,R.Guan,I.-J.Lee,Y.Liu,M.Chen,J.Wang,J.Wu,Z.Chen
Key ref: L.Sun et al. (2015). Mechanistic insights into the anchorage of the contractile ring by anillin and Mid1. Dev Cell, 33, 413-426. PubMed id: 25959226 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2015.03.003
Date:
16-Jan-15     Release date:   15-Jul-15    
PROCHECK
Go to PROCHECK summary
 Headers
 References

Protein chains
Pfam   ArchSchema ?
P61586  (RHOA_HUMAN) -  Transforming protein RhoA from Homo sapiens
Seq:
Struc:
193 a.a.
177 a.a.*
Protein chains
Pfam   ArchSchema ?
Q9NQW6  (ANLN_HUMAN) -  Anillin from Homo sapiens
Seq:
Struc:
 
Seq:
Struc:
 
Seq:
Struc:
1124 a.a.
210 a.a.
Key:    PfamA domain  Secondary structure  CATH domain
* PDB and UniProt seqs differ at 2 residue positions (black crosses)

 Enzyme reactions 
   Enzyme class 2: Chains A, C: E.C.3.6.5.2  - small monomeric GTPase.
[IntEnz]   [ExPASy]   [KEGG]   [BRENDA]
      Reaction: GTP + H2O = GDP + phosphate + H+
GTP
Bound ligand (Het Group name = GTP)
corresponds exactly
+ H2O
= GDP
+ phosphate
+ H(+)
   Enzyme class 3: Chains B, D: E.C.?
[IntEnz]   [ExPASy]   [KEGG]   [BRENDA]
Note, where more than one E.C. class is given (as above), each may correspond to a different protein domain or, in the case of polyprotein precursors, to a different mature protein.
Molecule diagrams generated from .mol files obtained from the KEGG ftp site

 

 
    reference    
 
 
DOI no: 10.1016/j.devcel.2015.03.003 Dev Cell 33:413-426 (2015)
PubMed id: 25959226  
 
 
Mechanistic insights into the anchorage of the contractile ring by anillin and Mid1.
L.Sun, R.Guan, I.J.Lee, Y.Liu, M.Chen, J.Wang, J.Q.Wu, Z.Chen.
 
  ABSTRACT  
 
Anillins and Mid1 are scaffold proteins that play key roles in anchorage of the contractile ring at the cell equator during cytokinesis in animals and fungi, respectively. Here, we report crystal structures and functional analysis of human anillin and S. pombe Mid1. The combined data show anillin contains a cryptic C2 domain and a Rho-binding domain. Together with the tethering PH domain, three membrane-associating elements synergistically bind to RhoA and phospholipids to anchor anillin at the cleavage furrow. Surprisingly, Mid1 also binds to the membrane through a cryptic C2 domain. Dimerization of Mid1 leads to high affinity and preference for PI(4,5)P2, which stably anchors Mid1 at the division plane, bypassing the requirement for Rho GTPase. These findings uncover the unexpected general machinery and the divergent regulatory logics for the anchorage of the contractile ring through the anillin/Mid1 family proteins from yeast to humans.
 

 

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