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IPR033910

Description

IPR033910 is a Glutamyl-tRNA synthetase.

<p>This entry represents the discriminating Glutamyl-tRNA synthetase (GluRS) catalytic core domain. The discriminating form of GluRS is only found in bacteria and cellular organelles. GluRS is a monomer that attaches Glu to the appropriate tRNA. Like other class I tRNA synthetases, GluRS aminoacylates the 2'-OH of the nucleotide at the 3' end of the tRNA. The core domain is based on the Rossman fold and is responsible for the ATP-dependent formation of the enzyme bound aminoacyl-adenylate. It contains the characteristic class I 'HIGH' and 'KMSKS' motifs, which are involved in ATP binding [[cite:PUB00006397]].</p> <p>Glutamate-tRNA ligase (also known as glutamyl-tRNA synthetase; [ec:6.1.1.17]) is a class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase. This enzyme shares similarities with glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase in terms of structure and catalytic properties. Glutamyl-tRNA synthetase (GluRS) and glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) are grouped in the GlxRS subclass because of the shared evolutionary pathway of their catalytic domains. The catalytic domain of Glx subfamily is believed to be more ancient, having evolved from a common GluRS ancestor that contained only the catalytic domain. Anticodon binding domains of extant bacterial and eukaryotic/archeal GlxRS appeared independently at a later stage, with the anticodon-binding domain of bacterial GlnRS being acquired by an unique horizontal gene transfer event from the eukaryotic kingdom [[cite:PUB00103851], [cite:PUB00103850]].</p> <p>Bacterial GluRS are divided into two groups -discriminatory GluRS (D-GluRS) and non-discriminatory GluRS (ND-GluRS). While D-GluRS exclusively catalyses the transfer of Glu to tRNA(Glu), the ND-GluRS can also glutamylate tRNA(Gln) forming Glu-tRNAGln. The misacylated product is then transformed to Gln-tRNA(Gln) by an enzyme known as glutamyl-tRNA(Gln) amidotransferase. The bacterial GluRS structure consists of four domains. The N-terminal half (domains 1 and 2) contains the 'Rossman fold' typical for class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases and resembles the corresponding part of GlnRS, whereas the C-terminal half exhibits a GluRS-specific structural features [[cite:PUB00006397]].</p> <p>The aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (also known as aminoacyl-tRNA ligases) catalyse the attachment of an amino acid to its cognate transfer RNA molecule in a highly specific two-step reaction [[cite:PUB00079872], [cite:PUB00079873]]. These proteins differ widely in size and oligomeric state, and have limited sequence homology [[cite:PUB00007191]]. The 20 aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are divided into two classes, I and II. Class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases contain a characteristic Rossman fold catalytic domain and are mostly monomeric [[cite:PUB00006477]]. Class II aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases share an anti-parallel β-sheet fold flanked by α-helices [[cite:PUB00000386]], and are mostly dimeric or multimeric, containing at least three conserved regions [[cite:PUB00000723], [cite:PUB00005365], [cite:PUB00004391]]. However, tRNA binding involves an α-helical structure that is conserved between class I and class II synthetases. In reactions catalysed by the class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, the aminoacyl group is coupled to the 2'-hydroxyl of the tRNA, while, in class II reactions, the 3'-hydroxyl site is preferred. The synthetases specific for arginine, cysteine, glutamic acid, glutamine, isoleucine, leucine, methionine, tyrosine, tryptophan, valine, and some lysine synthetases (non-eukaryotic group) belong to class I synthetases. The synthetases specific for alanine, asparagine, aspartic acid, glycine, histidine, phenylalanine, proline, serine, threonine, and some lysine synthetases (non-archaeal group), belong to class-II synthetases. Based on their mode of binding to the tRNA acceptor stem, both classes of tRNA synthetases have been subdivided into three subclasses, designated 1a, 1b, 1c and 2a, 2b, 2c [[cite:PUB00007363]].</p>

This description is obtained from EB-eye REST.

Associated GO terms

GO predictions are based solely on the InterPro-to-GO mappings published by EMBL-EBI, which are in turn based on the mapping of predicted domains to the InterPro dataset. The InterPro-to-GO mapping was last updated on , while the GO metadata was last updated on .

GO term Namespace Name Definition Relationships
Biological process Glutamyl-tRNA aminoacylation The process of coupling glutamate to glutamyl-tRNA, catalyzed by glutamyl-tRNA synthetase. The glutamyl-tRNA synthetase is a class-I synthetase. The activated amino acid is transferred to the 2'-OH group of a glutamic acid-accetping tRNA. The 2'-O-aminoacyl-tRNA will ultimately migrate to the 3' position via transesterification.
Molecular function Zinc ion binding Interacting selectively and non-covalently with zinc (Zn) ions.

Associated Lotus transcripts 2

Transcript Name Description Predicted domains Domain count
PREDICTED: glutamate--tRNA ligase, chloroplastic/mitochondrial-like [Cicer arietinum] gi|502155737|ref|XP_004510174.1| 23
Glutamate--tRNA ligase; TAIR: AT5G64050.1 glutamate tRNA synthetase; Swiss-Prot: sp|Q9FEA2|SYEM_ARATH Glutamate--tRNA ligase, chloroplastic/mitochondrial; TrEMBL-Plants: tr|V7ALD7|V7ALD7_PHAVU Uncharacterized protein; Found in the gene: LotjaGi3g1v0075100 25

Co-occuring domains 1

A list of co-occurring predicted domains within the L. japonicus gene space:

Predicted domain Source Observations Saturation (%)
cd00808 CDD 1 50.00