Protein Domain : IPR022374

Type:  Family Name:  ABC transporter, ATP-binding protein, ChvD
Description:  ABC transporters belong to the ATP-Binding Cassette (ABC) superfamily, which uses the hydrolysis of ATP to energise diverse biological systems. ABC transporters minimally consist of two conserved regions: a highly conserved ATP binding cassette (ABC) and a less conserved transmembrane domain (TMD). These can be found on the same protein or on two different ones. Most ABC transporters function as a dimer and therefore are constituted of four domains, two ABC modules and two TMDs.ABC transporters are involved in the export or import of a wide variety of substrates ranging from small ions to macromolecules. The major function of ABC import systems is to provide essential nutrients to bacteria. They are found only in prokaryotes and their four constitutive domains are usually encoded by independent polypeptides (two ABC proteins and two TMD proteins). Prokaryotic importers require additional extracytoplasmic binding proteins (one or more per systems) for function. In contrast, export systems are involved in the extrusion of noxious substances, the export of extracellular toxins and the targeting of membrane components. They are found in all living organisms and in general the TMD is fused to the ABC module in a variety of combinations. Some eukaryotic exporters encode the four domains on the same polypeptide chain [].The ABC module (approximately two hundred amino acid residues) is known to bind and hydrolyse ATP, thereby coupling transport to ATP hydrolysis in a large number of biological processes. The cassette is duplicated in several subfamilies. Its primary sequence is highly conserved, displaying a typical phosphate-binding loop: Walker A, and a magnesium binding site: Walker B. Besides these two regions, three other conserved motifs are present in the ABC cassette: the switch region which contains a histidine loop, postulated to polarise the attaching water molecule for hydrolysis, the signature conserved motif (LSGGQ) specific to the ABC transporter, and the Q-motif (between Walker A and the signature), which interacts with the gamma phosphate through a water bond. The Walker A, Walker B, Q-loop and switch region form the nucleotide binding site [, , ].The 3D structure of a monomeric ABC module adopts a stubby L-shape with two distinct arms. ArmI (mainly beta-strand) contains Walker A and Walker B. The important residues for ATP hydrolysis and/or binding are located in the P-loop. The ATP-binding pocket is located at the extremity of armI. The perpendicular armII contains mostly the alpha helical subdomain with the signature motif. It only seems to be required for structural integrity of the ABC module. ArmII is in direct contact with the TMD. The hinge between armI and armII contains both the histidine loop and the Q-loop, making contact with the gamma phosphate of the ATP molecule. ATP hydrolysis leads to a conformational change that could facilitate ADP release. In the dimer the two ABC cassettes contact each other through hydrophobic interactions at the antiparallel beta-sheet of armI by a two-fold axis [, , , , , ].The ATP-Binding Cassette (ABC) superfamily forms one of the largest of all protein families with a diversity of physiological functions []. Several studies have shown that there is a correlation between the functional characterisation and the phylogenetic classification of the ABC cassette [, ]. More than 50 subfamilies have been described based on a phylogenetic and functional classification [, , ]; (for further information see http://www.tcdb.org/tcdb/index.php?tc=3.A.1).Members of this protein family have two copies of the ABC transporter ATP-binding cassette, but are found outside the common ABC transporter operon structure that features integral membrane permease proteins and substrate-binding proteins encoded next to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC domain) protein. The Agrobacterium tumefaciensChvD protein was identified as both a candidate to interact with VirB8, based on yeast two-hybrid analysis, and as an apparent regulator of VirG. The general function of this protein family is unknown. Short Name:  ABC_ATP-bd_ChvD

0 Child Features

2 Contains

DB identifier Type Name
IPR003439 Domain ABC transporter-like
IPR017871 Conserved_site ABC transporter, conserved site

1 Cross References

Identifier
TIGR03719

0 Found In

0 GO Annotation

0 Ontology Annotations

0 Parent Features

17 Proteins

DB identifier UniProt Accession Secondary Identifier Organism Name Length
36277 I0Z0E4 PAC:27391196 Coccomyxa subellipsoidea C-169 549  
25670 C1MLT2 PAC:27347608 Micromonas pusilla CCMP1545 530  
106164 C1FH94 PAC:27397458 Micromonas sp RCC299 661  
46540 A4S2W0 PAC:27413909 Ostreococcus lucimarinus 549  
Cre07.g335400.t1.1 A8JCJ9 PAC:30774844 Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 647  
Sphfalx0001s0426.1.p PAC:32605273 Sphagnum fallax 686  
Pp3c2_25580V3.1.p A0A2K1L300 PAC:32934908 Physcomitrium patens 661  
Pp3c2_25580V3.2.p A0A2K1L300 PAC:32934909 Physcomitrium patens 661  
Mapoly0003s0135.1.p A0A2R6XSZ8 PAC:33009915 Marchantia polymorpha 654  
Brdisv1pangenome1001130m.p PAC:33621116 Brachypodium distachyon Pangenome 548  
Brdisv1BdTR11A1009837m.p PAC:35660802 Brachypodium distachyon BdTR11a 548  
Cz18g04250.t1 PAC:38234384 Chromochloris zofingiensis 672  
Sphmag15G089000.1.p PAC:41902922 Sphagnum magellanicum 687  
Sphfalx15G102800.2.p PAC:41968770 Sphagnum fallax 652  
Sphfalx15G102800.1.p PAC:41968769 Sphagnum fallax 686  
CepurR40.9G096300.1.p PAC:43001151 Ceratodon purpureus R40 658  
CepurGG1.9G111100.1.p PAC:43062815 Ceratodon purpureus GG1 663  

11 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            9872322
            9873074
            11421269
            1282354
            9640644
            11402022
            11080142
            11532960
            11421270
            11470432
            11988180