Protein Domain : IPR015685

Type:  Family Name:  Aquaporin 9
Description:  Aquaporins are water channels, present in both higher and lower organisms, that belong to the major intrinsic protein family. Most aquaporins are highly selective for water, though some also facilitate the movement of small uncharged molecules such as glycerol []. In higher eukaryotes these proteins play diverse roles in the maintenance of water homeostasis, indicating that membrane water permeability can be regulated independently of solute permeability. In microorganisms however, many of which do not contain aquaporins, they do not appear to play such a broad role. Instead, they assist specific microbial lifestyles within the environment, e.g. they confer protection against freeze-thaw stress and may help maintain water permeability at low temperatures []. The regulation of aquaporins is complex, including transcriptional, post-translational, protein-trafficking and channel-gating mechanisms that are frequently distinct for each family member.Structural studies show that aquaporins are present in the membrane as tetramers, though each monomer contains its own channel [, , ]. The monomer has an overall "hourglass" structure made up of three structural elements: an external vestibule, an internal vestibule, and an extended pore which connects the two vestibules. Substrate selectivity is conferred by two mechanisms. Firstly, the diameter of the pore physically limits the size of molecules that can pass through the channel. Secondly, specific amino acids within the molecule regulate the preference for hydrophobic or hydrophilic substrates.Aquaporin-9 was identified from human leukocytes by homology cloning []. AQP9 has unusually broad solute permeability and is expressed in hepatocyte plasma membranes. Expression of AQP9 in liver was induced up to 20-fold in rats fasted for 24 to 96 hours, and the AQP9 level gradually declined after re-feeding []. AQP9 shares greater sequence identity with AQP3 and AQP7 than with other members of the family, suggesting that these 3 proteins belong to a subfamily. Short Name:  Aquaporin_9

0 Child Features

1 Contains

DB identifier Type Name
IPR022357 Conserved_site Major intrinsic protein, conserved site

2 Cross Referencess

Identifier
PTHR19139:SF15
PR02021

0 Found In

0 GO Annotation

0 Ontology Annotations

1 Parent Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR000425 Family Major intrinsic protein

0 Proteins

7 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            11780053
            15377788
            15340377
            16406529
            14691544
            9514918
            12594337