ADGRG3/GPR97 Extracellular Region


Domain Annotation: ECOD Classification ECOD Database Homepage

ChainsFamily NameDomain Identifier ArchitecturePossible HomologyHomologyTopologyFamilyProvenance Source (Version)
DMIF4Ge7qu8D1 A: beta barrelsX: cradle loop barrelH: RIFT-relatedT: acid proteaseF: MIF4GECOD (v294.2)
CMIF4Ge7qu8C1 A: beta barrelsX: cradle loop barrelH: RIFT-relatedT: acid proteaseF: MIF4GECOD (v294.2)
BMIF4Ge7qu8B1 A: beta barrelsX: cradle loop barrelH: RIFT-relatedT: acid proteaseF: MIF4GECOD (v294.2)
AAsparaginase_2e7qu8A01 A: beta barrelsX: Histone-likeH: all-alpha NTP pyrophosphatasesT: Hypothetical protein AF_0060F: Asparaginase_2ECOD (v294.2)

Domain Annotation: CATH CATH Database Homepage

ChainDomainClassArchitectureTopologyHomologyProvenance Source (Version)
B2.60.220.50 Mainly Beta Sandwich Chondroitinase Ac Chain A, domain 3CATH (utative)
A2.60.220.50 Mainly Beta Sandwich Chondroitinase Ac Chain A, domain 3CATH (utative)

Protein Family Annotation Pfam Database Homepage

ChainsAccessionNameDescriptionCommentsSource
A, B, C, D
PF01825GAIN subdomain B (GPS)GAIN subdomain BThe GPS motif is found in GPCRs, and is the site for auto-proteolysis, so is thus named, GPS [1-4]. The GPS motif is a conserved sequence of ~40 amino acids containing canonical cysteine and tryptophan residues, and is the most highly conserved part ...The GPS motif is found in GPCRs, and is the site for auto-proteolysis, so is thus named, GPS [1-4]. The GPS motif is a conserved sequence of ~40 amino acids containing canonical cysteine and tryptophan residues, and is the most highly conserved part of the domain. In most, if not all, cell-adhesion GPCRs these undergo autoproteolysis in the GPS between a conserved aliphatic residue (usually a leucine) and a threonine, serine, or cysteine residue [5]. In higher eukaryotes this motif is found embedded in the C-terminal beta-stranded part of a GAIN domain - GPCR-Autoproteolysis INducing (GAIN), described as subdomain B, The GAIN-GPS domain/subdomain B adopts a fold in which the GPS motif, at the C-terminus, forms five beta-strands that, together with subdomain A, forms the overall GAIN domain [7]. The GPS motif, evolutionarily conserved from tetrahymena to mammals, is the only extracellular domain shared by all human cell-adhesion GPCRs and PKD proteins, and is the locus of multiple human disease mutations. The GAIN-GPS domain is both necessary and sufficient functionally for autoproteolysis, suggesting an autoproteolytic mechanism whereby the overall GAIN domain fine-tunes the chemical environment in the GPS to catalyse peptide bond hydrolysis [6]. In the cell-adhesion GPCRs and PKD proteins, the GPS motif is always located at the end of their long N-terminal extracellular regions, immediately before the first transmembrane helix of the respective protein.
Domain

Gene Ontology: Gene Product Annotation Gene Ontology Database Homepage

ChainsPolymerMolecular FunctionBiological ProcessCellular Component
A, B, C, D
Adhesion G protein-coupled receptor G3