GAF domain

Protein domain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The GAF domain is a type of protein domain that is found in a wide range of proteins from all species.[2] The GAF domain is named after some of the proteins it is found in: cGMP-specific phosphodiesterases, adenylyl cyclases and FhlA. The first structure of a GAF domain solved by Ho and colleagues showed that this domain shared a similar fold with the PAS domain.[3] In mammals, GAF domains are found in five members of the cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase superfamily: PDE2, PDE5, and PDE6 which bind cGMP to the GAF domain, PDE10 which binds cAMP, and PDE11 which binds both cGMP and cAMP.[4][5]

Quick facts Identifiers, Symbol ...
GAF domain
3',5'-Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterase 2A, Containing the GAF A and GAF B Domains.[1]
Identifiers
SymbolGAF
PfamPF01590
Pfam clanCL0161
InterProIPR003018
SMARTGAF
SCOP21fl4 / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Available protein structures:
PDB  IPR003018 PF01590 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
AlphaFold
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Examples

Human proteins containing this domain include:

References

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