AAAP family

Class of transport proteins From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Amino Acid/Auxin Permease (AAAP) Family (TC# 2.A.18) is a family of secondary carrier proteins, a member of the APC Superfamily that includes hundreds of proteins from plants, animals, fungi and lower eukaryotes. Six AAAPs in A. thaliana are well characterized and transport neutral and charged amino acids with varying specificities and affinities.[1][2]

Quick facts Amino Acid/Auxin Permease Family, Identifiers ...
Amino Acid/Auxin Permease Family
Identifiers
SymbolAAAP
PfamPF01490
Pfam clanCL0062
InterProIPR013057
TCDB2.A.18
Available protein structures:
PDB  IPR013057 PF01490 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
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Function

Among animal AAAP family members are numerous growth regulating System A and System N isoforms, each exhibiting distinctive tissue and subcellular localizations. The different isoforms also exhibit different relative affinities for the amino acid substrates. Some catalyze H+ antiport and can function bidirectionally. Since Systems A are electrogenic which Systems N are not, the amino acid:cation stoichiometries may differ.[2][3][4][5]

References

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