GGDEF domain

Protein domain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In molecular biology, a GGDEF domain is a protein domain which appears to be ubiquitous in bacteria and is often linked to a regulatory domain, such as a phosphorylation receiver or oxygen sensing domain. Its function is to act as a diguanylate cyclase and synthesize cyclic di-GMP, which is used as an intracellular signalling molecule in a wide variety of bacteria.[1][2] Enzymatic activity can be strongly influenced by the adjacent domains. Processes regulated by this domain include exopolysaccharide synthesis, biofilm formation, motility and cell differentiation.

Quick facts Identifiers, Symbol ...
GGDEF domain
response regulator PleD in complex with c-diGMP
Identifiers
SymbolGGDEF
PfamPF00990
Pfam clanCL0276
InterProIPR000160
SCOP21w25 / SCOPe / SUPFAM
CDDcd01949
Available protein structures:
PDB  IPR000160 PF00990 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
AlphaFold
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Structural studies of PleD from Caulobacter crescentus show that this domain forms a five-stranded beta sheet surrounded by helices, similar to the catalytic core of adenylate cyclase.[3]

References

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