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Field | Value |
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Namespace | Molecular function |
Short description | Adenine nucleotide transmembrane transporter activity |
Full defintion | Enables the transfer of adenine nucleotides (AMP, ADP, and ATP) from one side of a membrane to the other. |
Subterm of |
The relationship of GO:0000295 with other GO terms.
Relationship type | GO terms |
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Is a | |
Regulates | n.a. |
Part of | n.a. |
Positively regulates | n.a. |
Negatively regulates | n.a. |
A force layout showing the ancestor tree for GO:0000295, and its immediate children. If you wish to explore the tree dynamically, please use the GO Explorer.
This table contains additional metadata associated with the GO entry's definition field.
Field | Value |
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PMID | Identification and functional reconstitution of the yeast peroxisomal adenine nucleotide transporter. EMBO J. 2001 Sep 17; 20 (18): 5049–59.PMID: 11566870 The requirement for small molecule transport systems across the peroxisomal membrane has previously been postulated, but not directly proven. Here we report the identification and functional reconstitution of Ant1p (Ypr128cp), a peroxisomal transporter in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which has the characteristic sequence features of the mitochondrial carrier family. Ant1p was found to be an integral protein of the peroxisomal membrane and expression of ANT1 was oleic acid inducible. Targeting of Ant1p to peroxisomes was dependent on Pex3p and Pex19p, two peroxins specifically required for peroxisomal membrane protein insertion. Ant1p was essential for growth on medium-chain fatty acids as the sole carbon source. Upon reconstitution of the overexpressed and purified protein into liposomes, specific transport of adenine nucleotides could be demonstrated. Remarkably, both the substrate and inhibitor specificity differed from those of the mitochondrial ADP/ATP transporter. The physiological role of Ant1p in S.cerevisiae is probably to transport cytoplasmic ATP into the peroxisomal lumen in exchange for AMP generated in the activation of fatty acids. |
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 .