6Z1D

Crystal structure of the AAA domain of Rubisco Activase from Nostoc sp. (strain PCC 7120), Gadolinium complex


Domain Annotation: ECOD Classification ECOD Database Homepage

ChainsFamily NameDomain Identifier ArchitecturePossible HomologyHomologyTopologyFamilyProvenance Source (Version)
APF21228e6z1dA2 A: alpha arraysX: Histone-likeH: Histone-relatedT: AAA+ ATPase lid domainF: PF21228ECOD (1.6)
APF00004e6z1dA1 A: a/b three-layered sandwichesX: P-loop domains-likeH: P-loop domains-relatedT: P-loop containing nucleoside triphosphate hydrolasesF: PF00004ECOD (1.6)
BPF21228e6z1dB1 A: alpha arraysX: Histone-likeH: Histone-relatedT: AAA+ ATPase lid domainF: PF21228ECOD (1.6)
BPF00004e6z1dB2 A: a/b three-layered sandwichesX: P-loop domains-likeH: P-loop domains-relatedT: P-loop containing nucleoside triphosphate hydrolasesF: PF00004ECOD (1.6)

Protein Family Annotation Pfam Database Homepage

ChainsAccessionNameDescriptionCommentsSource
A, B
PF21228Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase, AAA, helical (RuBisCO_activase_AAA_helical)Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase, AAA, helicalThis domain is found in Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase from Nicotiana tabacum (RuBisCO activase) and similar proteins from plants and cyanobacteria. This enzyme facilitates the removal of the sugar phosphate inhibitors of RuBisC ...This domain is found in Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase from Nicotiana tabacum (RuBisCO activase) and similar proteins from plants and cyanobacteria. This enzyme facilitates the removal of the sugar phosphate inhibitors of RuBisCO, the enzyme that catalyses the fixation of atmospheric CO2 in photosynthesis. This protein is organised into an N-terminal, followed by a AAA module and a 23-residue C-terminal extension. The AAA module has an alpha-beta and an alpha-helical subdomains. This entry covers part of the alpha-beta subdomain and the C-terminal extension [1-4].
Domain
A, B
PF00004ATPase family associated with various cellular activities (AAA) (AAA)ATPase family associated with various cellular activities (AAA)AAA family proteins often perform chaperone-like functions that assist in the assembly, operation, or disassembly of protein complexes [2].Domain