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PROSITE documentation PDOC00406

Glutamine amidotransferase type 2 domain profile

Description:

A large group of biosynthetic enzymes are able to catalyze the removal of the ammonia group from glutamine and then to transfer this group to a substrate to form a new carbon-nitrogen group. This catalytic activity is known as glutamine amidotransferase (GATase) (EC 2.4.2.-) [1]. The GATase domain exists either as a separate polypeptidic subunit or as part of a larger polypeptide fused in different ways to a synthase domain. On the basis of sequence similarities two classes of GATase domains have been identified [2,3]: class-I (also known as trpG-type or triad) (see <PDOC00405>) and class-II (also known as purF-type or Ntn). Class-II (or type 2) GATase domains have been found in the following enzymes:

The active site is formed by a cysteine present at the N-terminal extremity of the mature form of all these enzymes [5,6,7,8]. Two other conserved residues, Asn and Gly, form an oxyanion hole for stabilization of the formed tetrahedral intermediate. An insert of ~120 residues can occur between the conserved regions [4]. In some class-II GATases (for example in Bacillus subtilis or chicken amido phosphoribosyltransferase) the enzyme is synthesized with a short propeptide which is cleaved off post-translationally by a proposed autocatalytic mechanism. Nuclear-encoded Fd-dependent gltS have a longer propeptide which may contain a chloroplast-targeting peptide in additon to the propeptide that is excised on enzyme activation [4].

The 3-D structure of the GATase type 2 domain forms a four layer α/β/β/α architecture (see <PDB:1LM1>) which consists of a fold similar to the N-terminal nucleophile (Ntn) hydrolases. These have the capacity for nucleophilic attack and the possibility of autocatalytic processing. The N-terminal position and the folding of the catalytic Cys differ strongly from the Cys-His-Glu triad which forms the active site of GATases of type 1 (see <PDOC00405>).

The profile we developed covers the entire GATase type 2 domain.

Last update:

November 2006 / Pattern removed, profile added and text revised.

Technical section:

PROSITE method (with tools and information) covered by this documentation:

GATASE_TYPE_2, PS51278Glutamine amidotransferase type 2 domain profile  (MATRIX)
Sequences known to belong to this class detected by the profile: ALL
Other sequence(s) detected in Swiss-Prot: NONE
Domain architecture view of Swiss-Prot proteins matching PS51278
PS51278
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Taxonomic tree view of all Swiss-Prot/TrEMBL entries matching PS51278
Retrieve a list of all Swiss-Prot/TrEMBL entries matching PS51278
Scan Swiss-Prot/TrEMBL entries against PS51278
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Matching PDB structures: 1AO0 1CT9 1EA0 1ECB ... [ALL]

References:

1 AuthorsBuchanan J.M.
TitleThe amidotransferases.
SourceAdv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 39:91-183(1973).
PubMed ID4355768
2 AuthorsWeng M.L., Zalkin H.
TitleStructural role for a conserved region in the CTP synthetase glutamine amide transfer domain.
SourceJ. Bacteriol. 169:3023-3028(1987).
PubMed ID3298209
3 AuthorsNyunoya H., Lusty C.J.
TitleSequence of the small subunit of yeast carbamyl phosphate synthetase and identification of its catalytic domain.
SourceJ. Biol. Chem. 259:9790-9798(1984).
PubMed ID6086650
4 AuthorsVanoni M.A., Curti B.
TitleGlutamate synthase: a complex iron-sulfur flavoprotein.
SourceCell. Mol. Life Sci. 55:617-638(1999).
PubMed ID10357231
5 AuthorsVollmer S.J., Switzer R.L., Hermodson M.A., Bower S.G., Zalkin H.
TitleThe glutamine-utilizing site of Bacillus subtilis glutamine phosphoribosylpyrophosphate amidotransferase.
SourceJ. Biol. Chem. 258:10582-10585(1983).
PubMed ID6411716
6 AuthorsVan Heeke G., Schuster S.M.
TitleThe N-terminal cysteine of human asparagine synthetase is essential for glutamine-dependent activity.
SourceJ. Biol. Chem. 264:19475-19477(1989).
PubMed ID2573597
7 AuthorsMassiere F., Badet-Denisot M.A.
TitleThe mechanism of glutamine-dependent amidotransferases.
SourceCell. Mol. Life Sci. 54:205-222(1998).
PubMed ID9575335
8 Authorsvan den Heuvel R.H.H., Curti B., Vanoni M.A., Mattevi A.
TitleGlutamate synthase: a fascinating pathway from L-glutamine to L-glutamate.
SourceCell. Mol. Life Sci. 61:669-681(2004).
PubMed ID15052410
DOI10.1007/s00018-003-3316-0

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