2IL3 | pdb_00002il3

Structures of an Insect Epsilon-class Glutathione S-transferase from the Malaria Vector Anopheles Gambiae: Evidence for High DDT-detoxifying Activity


Domain Annotation: ECOD Classification ECOD Database Homepage

ChainsFamily NameDomain Identifier ArchitecturePossible HomologyHomologyTopologyFamilyProvenance Source (Version)
Be2il3B1 A: HTHX: HTHH: tetra-helical, lambda repressor-likeT:F:ECOD (20:10:01)
Ae2il3A1 A: Profilin-likeX: sensor domainsH: sensor domainsT:F:ECOD (20:10:01)

Domain Annotation: CATH CATH Database Homepage

Protein Family Annotation Pfam Database Homepage

ChainsAccessionNameDescriptionCommentsSource
A, B
PF13417Glutathione S-transferase, N-terminal domain (GST_N_3)Glutathione S-transferase, N-terminal domainDomain
A, B
PF00043Glutathione S-transferase, C-terminal domain (GST_C)Glutathione S-transferase, C-terminal domainGST conjugates reduced glutathione to a variety of targets including S-crystallin from squid, the eukaryotic elongation factor 1-gamma, the HSP26 family of stress-related proteins and auxin-regulated proteins in plants. Stringent starvation proteins ...GST conjugates reduced glutathione to a variety of targets including S-crystallin from squid, the eukaryotic elongation factor 1-gamma, the HSP26 family of stress-related proteins and auxin-regulated proteins in plants. Stringent starvation proteins in E. coli are also included in the alignment but are not known to have GST activity. The glutathione molecule binds in a cleft between N and C-terminal domains. The catalytically important residues are proposed to reside in the N-terminal domain [1]. In plants, GSTs are encoded by a large gene family (48 GST genes in Arabidopsis) and can be divided into the phi, tau, theta, zeta, and lambda classes [2].
Domain