Recoverin, a calcium-activated myristoyl switch

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Recoverin: 1iku model 7 (calcium-free) morphed to 1jsa model 9 (calcium-bound) complex with myristic acid.

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3D structures of recoverin

Updated on 11-August-2021

2d8n – RCV – human
2het, 1omr, 1rec, 4m2q, 4mlw – bRCV – bovine
1jsa, 1iku - bRCV - NMR
1omv, 4m2o, 4m2p, 4yi8, 4yi9 – bRCV (mutant)
1la3 - bRCV (mutant) - NMR
2i94 – bRCV + rhodopsin kinase

Credits

This page was adapted from The Protein Morpher, a defunct, Chime-based website written in 1998 by Eric Martz.

References

  1. The Storymorph Jmol scripts were used to create the interpolation shown in the morph. Image:Morph recoverin.pdb available on Proteopedia<\ref> emphasizes that two parts of the molecule rotate relative to each other while retaining their local fold. The two calcium ions each bind to an EF hand motif, one in the C-terminal domain, and one in the N-terminal domain. Recoverin actually contains four EF hand motifs, but two of them are unable to bind calcium due to variations in sequence. Recoverin, which has been described as a calcium-myristoyl switch, is a member of a large family of sequence-similar proteins found from yeast through invertebrates and mammals. Those found in the nervous system are suspected to "participate in membrane-associated signal transduction processes by coupling G-protein receptors to calcium cascades" (Tanaka et al., 1995<ref>Tanaka T, Ames JB, Harvey TS, Stryer L, Ikura M, Nature 376(6539):444-447, 1995. PMID:[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7630423 7630423]</li> <li id="cite_note-tanaka1995">[[#cite_ref-tanaka1995_0|↑]] <strong class="error">Cite error: Invalid <code>&lt;ref&gt;</code> tag; no text was provided for refs named <code>tanaka1995</code></strong></li> <li id="cite_note-2">[[#cite_ref-2|↑]] Ames JB, Ishima R, Tanaka T, Gordon JI, Stryer L, Ikura M, Nature 389(6647):198-202, 1997. PMID:[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9296500 9296500]</li></ol></ref>

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