chloroplast protein import component Toc86/159, G and M domains; The long precursor of the 86K ...
454-1206
0e+00
chloroplast protein import component Toc86/159, G and M domains; The long precursor of the 86K protein originally described is proposed to have three domains. The N-terminal A-domain is acidic, repetitive, weakly conserved, readily removed by proteolysis during chloroplast isolation, and not required for protein translocation. The other domains are designated G (GTPase) and M (membrane anchor); this family includes most of the G domain and all of M. [Transport and binding proteins, Amino acids, peptides and amines]
The actual alignment was detected with superfamily member TIGR00993:
Pssm-ID: 273381 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 763 Bit Score: 1343.07 E-value: 0e+00
chloroplast protein import component Toc86/159, G and M domains; The long precursor of the 86K ...
454-1206
0e+00
chloroplast protein import component Toc86/159, G and M domains; The long precursor of the 86K protein originally described is proposed to have three domains. The N-terminal A-domain is acidic, repetitive, weakly conserved, readily removed by proteolysis during chloroplast isolation, and not required for protein translocation. The other domains are designated G (GTPase) and M (membrane anchor); this family includes most of the G domain and all of M. [Transport and binding proteins, Amino acids, peptides and amines]
Pssm-ID: 273381 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 763 Bit Score: 1343.07 E-value: 0e+00
Translocase of chloroplast 159/132, membrane anchor domain; This is the membrane-anchor domain ...
931-1197
3.11e-168
Translocase of chloroplast 159/132, membrane anchor domain; This is the membrane-anchor domain of translocase of chloroplast 159, TOC159/132. This domain is present in plants at the C-terminus of the GTPase, AIG1, pfam04548, and anchors the GTPas region to the outer membrane of the chloroplast. The domain may carry a very C-terminal sequence motif that resembles a transit peptide.
Pssm-ID: 432163 Cd Length: 267 Bit Score: 498.34 E-value: 3.11e-168
Translocon at the Outer-envelope membrane of Chloroplasts 34-like (Toc34-like); The Toc34-like ...
544-792
2.62e-133
Translocon at the Outer-envelope membrane of Chloroplasts 34-like (Toc34-like); The Toc34-like (Translocon at the Outer-envelope membrane of Chloroplasts) family contains several Toc proteins, including Toc34, Toc33, Toc120, Toc159, Toc86, Toc125, and Toc90. The Toc complex at the outer envelope membrane of chloroplasts is a molecular machine of ~500 kDa that contains a single Toc159 protein, four Toc75 molecules, and four or five copies of Toc34. Toc64 and Toc12 are associated with the translocon, but do not appear to be part of the core complex. The Toc translocon initiates the import of nuclear-encoded preproteins from the cytosol into the organelle. Toc34 and Toc159 are both GTPases, while Toc75 is a beta-barrel integral membrane protein. Toc159 is equally distributed between a soluble cytoplasmic form and a membrane-inserted form, suggesting that assembly of the Toc complex is dynamic. Toc34 and Toc75 act sequentially to mediate docking and insertion of Toc159 resulting in assembly of the functional translocon.
Pssm-ID: 206652 Cd Length: 248 Bit Score: 406.32 E-value: 2.62e-133
chloroplast protein import component Toc86/159, G and M domains; The long precursor of the 86K ...
454-1206
0e+00
chloroplast protein import component Toc86/159, G and M domains; The long precursor of the 86K protein originally described is proposed to have three domains. The N-terminal A-domain is acidic, repetitive, weakly conserved, readily removed by proteolysis during chloroplast isolation, and not required for protein translocation. The other domains are designated G (GTPase) and M (membrane anchor); this family includes most of the G domain and all of M. [Transport and binding proteins, Amino acids, peptides and amines]
Pssm-ID: 273381 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 763 Bit Score: 1343.07 E-value: 0e+00
Translocase of chloroplast 159/132, membrane anchor domain; This is the membrane-anchor domain ...
931-1197
3.11e-168
Translocase of chloroplast 159/132, membrane anchor domain; This is the membrane-anchor domain of translocase of chloroplast 159, TOC159/132. This domain is present in plants at the C-terminus of the GTPase, AIG1, pfam04548, and anchors the GTPas region to the outer membrane of the chloroplast. The domain may carry a very C-terminal sequence motif that resembles a transit peptide.
Pssm-ID: 432163 Cd Length: 267 Bit Score: 498.34 E-value: 3.11e-168
Translocon at the Outer-envelope membrane of Chloroplasts 34-like (Toc34-like); The Toc34-like ...
544-792
2.62e-133
Translocon at the Outer-envelope membrane of Chloroplasts 34-like (Toc34-like); The Toc34-like (Translocon at the Outer-envelope membrane of Chloroplasts) family contains several Toc proteins, including Toc34, Toc33, Toc120, Toc159, Toc86, Toc125, and Toc90. The Toc complex at the outer envelope membrane of chloroplasts is a molecular machine of ~500 kDa that contains a single Toc159 protein, four Toc75 molecules, and four or five copies of Toc34. Toc64 and Toc12 are associated with the translocon, but do not appear to be part of the core complex. The Toc translocon initiates the import of nuclear-encoded preproteins from the cytosol into the organelle. Toc34 and Toc159 are both GTPases, while Toc75 is a beta-barrel integral membrane protein. Toc159 is equally distributed between a soluble cytoplasmic form and a membrane-inserted form, suggesting that assembly of the Toc complex is dynamic. Toc34 and Toc75 act sequentially to mediate docking and insertion of Toc159 resulting in assembly of the functional translocon.
Pssm-ID: 206652 Cd Length: 248 Bit Score: 406.32 E-value: 2.62e-133
AvrRpt2-Induced Gene 1 (AIG1); This group represents Arabidoposis protein AIG1 ...
576-702
2.71e-09
AvrRpt2-Induced Gene 1 (AIG1); This group represents Arabidoposis protein AIG1 (avrRpt2-induced gene 1) that appears to be involved in plant resistance to bacteria. The Arabidopsis disease resistance gene RPS2 is involved in recognition of bacterial pathogens carrying the avirulence gene avrRpt2. AIG1 exhibits RPS2- and avrRpt1-dependent induction early after infection with Pseudomonas syringae carrying avrRpt2. This subfamily also includes IAN-4 protein, which has GTP-binding activity and shares sequence homology with a novel family of putative GTP-binding proteins: the immuno-associated nucleotide (IAN) family. The evolutionary conservation of the IAN family provides a unique example of a plant pathogen response gene conserved in animals. The IAN/IMAP subfamily has been proposed to regulate apoptosis in vertebrates and angiosperm plants, particularly in relation to cancer, diabetes, and infections. The human IAN genes were renamed GIMAP (GTPase of the immunity associated proteins).
Pssm-ID: 206651 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 201 Bit Score: 58.32 E-value: 2.71e-09
50S ribosome-binding GTPase; The full-length GTPase protein is required for the complete ...
576-664
4.01e-08
50S ribosome-binding GTPase; The full-length GTPase protein is required for the complete activity of the protein of interacting with the 50S ribosome and binding of both adenine and guanine nucleotides, with a preference for guanine nucleotide.
Pssm-ID: 460387 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 113 Bit Score: 52.62 E-value: 4.01e-08
Rat sarcoma (Ras)-like superfamily of small guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases); Ras-like ...
579-708
4.35e-05
Rat sarcoma (Ras)-like superfamily of small guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases); Ras-like GTPase superfamily. The Ras-like superfamily of small GTPases consists of several families with an extremely high degree of structural and functional similarity. The Ras superfamily is divided into at least four families in eukaryotes: the Ras, Rho, Rab, and Sar1/Arf families. This superfamily also includes proteins like the GTP translation factors, Era-like GTPases, and G-alpha chain of the heterotrimeric G proteins. Members of the Ras superfamily regulate a wide variety of cellular functions: the Ras family regulates gene expression, the Rho family regulates cytoskeletal reorganization and gene expression, the Rab and Sar1/Arf families regulate vesicle trafficking, and the Ran family regulates nucleocytoplasmic transport and microtubule organization. The GTP translation factor family regulates initiation, elongation, termination, and release in translation, and the Era-like GTPase family regulates cell division, sporulation, and DNA replication. Members of the Ras superfamily are identified by the GTP binding site, which is made up of five characteristic sequence motifs, and the switch I and switch II regions.
Pssm-ID: 206648 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 161 Bit Score: 45.14 E-value: 4.35e-05
CDC/Septin GTPase family; Septins are a conserved family of GTP-binding proteins associated ...
573-654
6.86e-05
CDC/Septin GTPase family; Septins are a conserved family of GTP-binding proteins associated with diverse processes in dividing and non-dividing cells. They were first discovered in the budding yeast S. cerevisiae as a set of genes (CDC3, CDC10, CDC11 and CDC12) required for normal bud morphology. Septins are also present in metazoan cells, where they are required for cytokinesis in some systems, and implicated in a variety of other processes involving organization of the cell cortex and exocytosis. In humans, 12 septin genes generate dozens of polypeptides, many of which comprise heterooligomeric complexes. Since septin mutants are commonly defective in cytokinesis and formation of the neck formation of the neck filaments/septin rings, septins have been considered to be the primary constituents of the neck filaments. Septins belong to the GTPase superfamily for their conserved GTPase motifs and enzymatic activities.
Pssm-ID: 206649 Cd Length: 275 Bit Score: 46.00 E-value: 6.86e-05
Circularly permuted YlqF-related GTPases; These proteins are found in bacteria, eukaryotes, ...
576-632
7.24e-04
Circularly permuted YlqF-related GTPases; These proteins are found in bacteria, eukaryotes, and archaea. They all exhibit a circular permutation of the GTPase signature motifs so that the order of the conserved G box motifs is G4-G5-G1-G2-G3, with G4 and G5 being permuted from the C-terminal region of proteins in the Ras superfamily to the N-terminus of YlqF-related GTPases.
Pssm-ID: 206746 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 146 Bit Score: 41.22 E-value: 7.24e-04
Septin; Members of this family include CDC3, CDC10, CDC11 and CDC12/Septin. Members of this ...
573-654
9.24e-04
Septin; Members of this family include CDC3, CDC10, CDC11 and CDC12/Septin. Members of this family bind GTP. As regards the septins, these are polypeptides of 30-65kDa with three characteriztic GTPase motifs (G-1, G-3 and G-4) that are similar to those of the Ras family. The G-4 motif is strictly conserved with a unique septin consensus of AKAD. Most septins are thought to have at least one coiled-coil region, which in some cases is necessary for intermolecular interactions that allow septins to polymerize to form rod-shaped complexes. In turn, these are arranged into tandem arrays to form filaments. They are multifunctional proteins, with roles in cytokinesis, sporulation, germ cell development, exocytosis and apoptosis.
Pssm-ID: 395596 Cd Length: 272 Bit Score: 42.67 E-value: 9.24e-04
E. coli Ras-like protein (Era)-like GTPase; The Era (E. coli Ras-like protein)-like family ...
579-633
1.19e-03
E. coli Ras-like protein (Era)-like GTPase; The Era (E. coli Ras-like protein)-like family includes several distinct subfamilies (TrmE/ThdF, FeoB, YihA (EngB), Era, and EngA/YfgK) that generally show sequence conservation in the region between the Walker A and B motifs (G1 and G3 box motifs), to the exclusion of other GTPases. TrmE is ubiquitous in bacteria and is a widespread mitochondrial protein in eukaryotes, but is absent from archaea. The yeast member of TrmE family, MSS1, is involved in mitochondrial translation; bacterial members are often present in translation-related operons. FeoB represents an unusual adaptation of GTPases for high-affinity iron (II) transport. YihA (EngB) family of GTPases is typified by the E. coli YihA, which is an essential protein involved in cell division control. Era is characterized by a distinct derivative of the KH domain (the pseudo-KH domain) which is located C-terminal to the GTPase domain. EngA and its orthologs are composed of two GTPase domains and, since the sequences of the two domains are more similar to each other than to other GTPases, it is likely that an ancient gene duplication, rather than a fusion of evolutionarily distinct GTPases, gave rise to this family.
Pssm-ID: 206646 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 161 Bit Score: 41.08 E-value: 1.19e-03
Database: CDSEARCH/cdd Low complexity filter: no Composition Based Adjustment: yes E-value threshold: 0.01
References:
Wang J et al. (2023), "The conserved domain database in 2023", Nucleic Acids Res.51(D)384-8.
Lu S et al. (2020), "The conserved domain database in 2020", Nucleic Acids Res.48(D)265-8.
Marchler-Bauer A et al. (2017), "CDD/SPARCLE: functional classification of proteins via subfamily domain architectures.", Nucleic Acids Res.45(D)200-3.
of the residues that compose this conserved feature have been mapped to the query sequence.
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