Yersinia YopH

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 13: Line 13:
== YopH Structure ==
== YopH Structure ==
-
YopH is a 51kDa, 468 amino acid protein with two domains linked by a proline rich sequence<ref name="Ivanov" /><ref name="Cornelis"/>. Residues 1-129 form the N-terminal domain which contains a binding site ("site 1") for substrate targeting<ref name="Ivanov" />. This site is not catalytic, and the binding domain appears to be unique among phosphotyrosine binding domains as it does not resemble SH2 (Src homology 2) or PTB (phospotyrosine-binding) domains<ref name="Ivanov" />. The second domain is the catalytically active domain with a mixed β-sheet in the center of the protein, surrounded by α-helices<ref name="Stuckey" />. This domain encompasses the residues from approximately 163-468, and has two binding sites<ref name="Ivanov" />. One appears to be involved in substrate specificity ("site 2"), while the other is the catalytic site<ref name="Ivanov" />.
+
YopH is a 51kDa, 468 amino acid protein with two domains linked by a proline rich sequence<ref name="Ivanov" /><ref name="Cornelis"/>. Residues 1-129 form the N-terminal domain which contains a binding site ("site 1") for substrate targeting<ref name="Ivanov" />. This site is not catalytic, and the binding domain appears to be unique among phosphotyrosine binding domains as it does not resemble SH2 (Src homology 2) or PTB (phospotyrosine-binding) domains<ref name="Ivanov" />. The second domain is the catalytically active domain with a mixed β-sheet in the center of the protein, surrounded by α-helices<ref name="Stuckey" />. This domain encompasses the residues from approximately 163-468, and has two binding sites<ref name="Ivanov" />. One appears to be involved in substrate specificity ("site 2"), while the other is the catalytic site<ref name="Ivanov" />.
-
{{STRUCTURE_1k46| SCENE=Sandbox_162/Nterminal_subunit_yoph/2|Left|The N-terminal subunit of YopH. SCENE=Sandbox_162/Catalytic_subunit_yopha/1}}[[Image:Catalytic domain of YopH.gif|thumb|left|The catalytic domain of YopH. The C-terminal residue is coloured in red, the residue closest to the N-terminal of the protein is coloured in blue, the phosphate binding loop is coloured green, and the phosphopeptide ligands are purple. ]]{{STRUCTURE_1xxv| SCENE=Sandbox_162/Catalytic_subunit_yophb/1| The catalytic subunit of YopH bound to EGFR-derived peptide substrates SCENE=Sandbox_162/Catalytic_subunit_yopha/1}}
+
 
 +
<scene name='Sandbox_162/Nterminal_subunit_yoph/2'> The N-terminal subunit of YopH</scene>.
 +
 
 +
[[Image:Catalytic domain of YopH.gif|thumb|left|The catalytic domain of YopH. The C-terminal residue is coloured in red, the residue closest to the N-terminal of the protein is coloured in blue, the phosphate binding loop is coloured green, and the phosphopeptide ligands are purple. ]]{{STRUCTURE_1xxv| SCENE=Sandbox_162/Catalytic_subunit_yophb/1| The catalytic subunit of YopH bound to EGFR-derived peptide substrates SCENE=Sandbox_162/Catalytic_subunit_yopha/1}}
The '''N-terminal subunit''' (1k46) is important for secretion, binding of SycH, and binding of the substrates to the catalytic domain. This domain contains four α-helices and four β-sheets in an α+β arrangement<ref name="Smith"/>. The amino-terminal α-helix (residues 2-17) makes up the secretion signal<ref name="Smith">Smith, C.L., Khandelwal, P., Keliikuli, K., Zuiderweg, E.R.P. and Saper, M. Structure of the type III secretion and substrate-binding domain of ''Yersinia'' YopH phosphatase. ''Molecular Microbiology''. 2001. 42:967-979.</ref>. Since there does not appear to be a conserved signal sequence between secreted proteins in type III secretion systems, nor a signal peptide cleaved, it has been suggested that recognition of secreted proteins may be by a structural motif, such as an amphipathic helix<ref name="Smith" />. The chaperone SycH binds to residues 20-70 in a hydrophobic patch from a nascent or partially unfolded N-terminal domain<ref name="Smith" />. <br/>
The '''N-terminal subunit''' (1k46) is important for secretion, binding of SycH, and binding of the substrates to the catalytic domain. This domain contains four α-helices and four β-sheets in an α+β arrangement<ref name="Smith"/>. The amino-terminal α-helix (residues 2-17) makes up the secretion signal<ref name="Smith">Smith, C.L., Khandelwal, P., Keliikuli, K., Zuiderweg, E.R.P. and Saper, M. Structure of the type III secretion and substrate-binding domain of ''Yersinia'' YopH phosphatase. ''Molecular Microbiology''. 2001. 42:967-979.</ref>. Since there does not appear to be a conserved signal sequence between secreted proteins in type III secretion systems, nor a signal peptide cleaved, it has been suggested that recognition of secreted proteins may be by a structural motif, such as an amphipathic helix<ref name="Smith" />. The chaperone SycH binds to residues 20-70 in a hydrophobic patch from a nascent or partially unfolded N-terminal domain<ref name="Smith" />. <br/>

Revision as of 12:55, 23 July 2013

PDB ID 1xxv

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

David Canner, Michal Harel, Cara Halseth, Alexander Berchansky

Personal tools