1j1d

From Proteopedia

Revision as of 11:17, 21 February 2008 by OCA (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

1j1d, resolution 2.61Å

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Crystal structure of the 46kDa domain of human cardiac troponin in the Ca2+ saturated form

Contents

Overview

Troponin is essential in Ca(2+) regulation of skeletal and cardiac muscle contraction. It consists of three subunits (TnT, TnC and TnI) and, together with tropomyosin, is located on the actin filament. Here we present crystal structures of the core domains (relative molecular mass of 46,000 and 52,000) of human cardiac troponin in the Ca(2+)-saturated form. Analysis of the four-molecule structures reveals that the core domain is further divided into structurally distinct subdomains that are connected by flexible linkers, making the entire molecule highly flexible. The alpha-helical coiled-coil formed between TnT and TnI is integrated in a rigid and asymmetric structure (about 80 angstrom long), the IT arm, which bridges putative tropomyosin-anchoring regions. The structures of the troponin ternary complex imply that Ca(2+) binding to the regulatory site of TnC removes the carboxy-terminal portion of TnI from actin, thereby altering the mobility and/or flexibility of troponin and tropomyosin on the actin filament.

Disease

Known diseases associated with this structure: Cardiomyopathy, dilated, 1D OMIM:[191045], Cardiomyopathy, familial hypertrophic OMIM:[191044], Cardiomyopathy, familial hypertrophic, 192600 (3) OMIM:[191040], Cardiomyopathy, familial hypertrophic, 2 OMIM:[191045], Cardiomyopathy, familial restrictive OMIM:[191044]

About this Structure

1J1D is a Protein complex structure of sequences from Homo sapiens with as ligand. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

Structure of the core domain of human cardiac troponin in the Ca(2+)-saturated form., Takeda S, Yamashita A, Maeda K, Maeda Y, Nature. 2003 Jul 3;424(6944):35-41. PMID:12840750

Page seeded by OCA on Thu Feb 21 13:17:57 2008

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools