1ega

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1ega, resolution 2.4Å

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CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF A WIDELY CONSERVED GTPASE ERA

Overview

ERA forms a unique family of GTPase. It is widely conserved and essential, in bacteria. ERA functions in cell cycle control by coupling cell division, with growth rate. ERA homologues also are found in eukaryotes. Here we, report the crystal structure of ERA from Escherichia coli. The structure, has been determined at 2.4-A resolution. It reveals a two-domain, arrangement of the molecule: an N-terminal domain that resembles p21 Ras, and a C-terminal domain that is unique. Structure-based topological search, of the C domain fails to reveal any meaningful match, although sequence, analysis suggests that it contains a KH domain. KH domains are RNA binding, motifs that usually occur in tandem repeats and exhibit low sequence, similarity except for the well-conserved segment VIGxxGxxIK. We have, identified a betaalphaalphabeta fold that contains the VIGxxGxxIK sequence, and is shared by the C domain of ERA and the KH domain. We propose that, this betaalphaalphabeta fold is the RNA binding motif, the minimum, structural requirement for RNA binding. ERA dimerizes in crystal. The, dimer formation involves a significantly distorted switch II region, which, may shed light on how ERA protein regulates downstream events.

About this Structure

1EGA is a Single protein structure of sequence from Escherichia coli with SO4 as ligand. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

Crystal structure of ERA: a GTPase-dependent cell cycle regulator containing an RNA binding motif., Chen X, Court DL, Ji X, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 Jul 20;96(15):8396-401. PMID:10411886

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