Recombination-activating gene

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<scene name='77/778335/Rag2/1'> RAG2</scene> contains a plant homeodomain (PHD) near its C terminus (RAG2-PHD). This is unique because when a peptide is not being modified, a peptide N-terminal occupies the binding site, meaning that it is self-regulated. There is significantly less structural data on RAG2 due to a debate about the function of RAG2. Many challenge the belief that RAG2 cuts the RSS sequence, believing instead that RAG2 acts as a regulatory component to the complex.
<scene name='77/778335/Rag2/1'> RAG2</scene> contains a plant homeodomain (PHD) near its C terminus (RAG2-PHD). This is unique because when a peptide is not being modified, a peptide N-terminal occupies the binding site, meaning that it is self-regulated. There is significantly less structural data on RAG2 due to a debate about the function of RAG2. Many challenge the belief that RAG2 cuts the RSS sequence, believing instead that RAG2 acts as a regulatory component to the complex.
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== 3D Structures of recombination-activating gene ==
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[[Recombination-activating gene 3D structures]]
</StructureSection>
</StructureSection>
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**[[3gna]], [[3gnb]] – mRAG1 nonamer binding domain 389-456 + DNA – mouse <br />
**[[3gna]], [[3gnb]] – mRAG1 nonamer binding domain 389-456 + DNA – mouse <br />
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**[[1rmd]] – mRAG1 dimerization domain 265-380 <br />
*RAG2
*RAG2
**[[2jwo]] – mRAG2 PHD finger 414-487 - NMR <br />
**[[2jwo]] – mRAG2 PHD finger 414-487 - NMR <br />
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**[[2v83]], [[2v85]], [[2v86]], [[2v87]], [[2v88]], [[2v89]] – mRAG2 PHD finger + histone peptide <br />
*RAG1+RAG2
*RAG1+RAG2

Revision as of 10:20, 8 December 2019

Recombination-Activating Gene Complex

RAG1 (grey, pink) and RAG2 (green, yellow) complex with DNA and Zn+2 (grey) (PDB code 3jbw)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

3D Structures of recombination-activating gene

Updated on 08-December-2019

References

  1. Jones, Pat, et al. Immunology. 7th ed., W.H. Freeman and Company, 2013.
  2. Sadofsky, Moshe J. “The RAG Proteins in V(D)J Recombination: More than Just a Nuclease.” Nucleic Acids Research 29.7 (2001): 1399–1409. Print.
  3. Akamatsu, Yoshiko, and Marjorie A. Oettinger. “Distinct Roles of RAG1 and RAG2 in Binding the V(D)J Recombination Signal Sequences.” Molecular and Cellular Biology 18.8 (1998): 4670–4678. Print.
  4. Schuetz C, Huck K, Gudowius S, Megahed M, Feyen O, Hubner B, Schneider DT, Manfras B, Pannicke U, Willemze R, Knuchel R, Gobel U, Schulz A, Borkhardt A, Friedrich W, Schwarz K, Niehues T. An immunodeficiency disease with RAG mutations and granulomas. N Engl J Med. 2008 May 8;358(19):2030-8. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa073966. PMID:18463379 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa073966
  5. Levy, Daniel, director. VDJ Gene Recombination. VDJ Gene Recombination , 10 Apr. 2014, www.youtube.com/watch?v=QTOBSFJWogE.
  6. “RAG1 Gene - Genetics Home Reference.” U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, ghr.nlm.nih.gov/gene/RAG1.

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