Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)
From Proteopedia
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CFTR is a mostly <scene name='78/785332/Secondary_structure/1'>alpha helical</scene> protein. The membrane spanning segments can be clearly seen with coloring by <scene name='78/785332/Hydrophobicity/1'>hydrophobicity</scene>, which shows hydrophobic residues in gray and hydrophilic residues in purple. | CFTR is a mostly <scene name='78/785332/Secondary_structure/1'>alpha helical</scene> protein. The membrane spanning segments can be clearly seen with coloring by <scene name='78/785332/Hydrophobicity/1'>hydrophobicity</scene>, which shows hydrophobic residues in gray and hydrophilic residues in purple. | ||
- | The extracellular end of the channel has several <scene name='78/785332/Ec_cl_selection/1'>positively charged</scene> residues that are important for recruiting chloride ions to the channel. A number of <scene name='78/785332/Plus_channel/1'>positively charged</scene> residues line the channel. In the unphosphorylated state (as this structure is), a <scene name='78/785332/Regulatory_domain/2'>regulatory domain</scene> blocks the activity of the channel (the connecting segments are not visible in the structure). It contains several negatively charged residues; when the protein is phosphorylated, this segment is repelled, causing a structural change. <ref>PMID:28340353</ref> | + | The extracellular end of the channel has several <scene name='78/785332/Ec_cl_selection/1'>positively charged</scene> residues that are important for recruiting chloride ions to the channel. A number of <scene name='78/785332/Plus_channel/1'>positively charged</scene> residues line the channel. In the unphosphorylated state (as this structure is), a <scene name='78/785332/Regulatory_domain/2'>regulatory domain</scene> blocks the activity of the channel (the connecting segments are not visible in the structure). It contains several negatively charged residues; when the protein is phosphorylated, this segment is repelled, causing a structural change. <ref>PMID:28340353</ref> In the unphosphorylated state, 99,103,104,334,335,337,1138 <scene name='78/785332/Blocked_channel/1'>block the channel</scene>; in the <scene name='78/785332/Phosphorylated_pore/1'>phosphorylated state</scene>, these amino acids are moved out of the way, creating a pore large enough for a chloride ion to move through the channel. |
CFTR contains two <scene name='78/785332/Nbd/2'>nucleotide binding domains</scene> (NBD's), which both contain <scene name='78/785332/Walker_motifs/2'>Walker motifs</scene>, flexible loops that bind phosphate groups tightly and are highly conserved among ATP-binding proteins. | CFTR contains two <scene name='78/785332/Nbd/2'>nucleotide binding domains</scene> (NBD's), which both contain <scene name='78/785332/Walker_motifs/2'>Walker motifs</scene>, flexible loops that bind phosphate groups tightly and are highly conserved among ATP-binding proteins. |
Revision as of 20:07, 21 March 2025
Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)
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References
- ↑ Liu F, Zhang Z, Csanady L, Gadsby DC, Chen J. Molecular Structure of the Human CFTR Ion Channel. Cell. 2017 Mar 23;169(1):85-95.e8. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.02.024. PMID:28340353 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2017.02.024
- ↑ https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/condition/cystic-fibrosis