Kelch motif

Protein family From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Kelch motif is a region of protein sequence found widely in proteins from bacteria and eukaryotes.[2] This sequence motif is composed of about 50 amino acid residues which form a structure of a four stranded beta-sheet "blade". This sequence motif is found in between five and eight tandem copies per protein which fold together to form a larger circular solenoid structure called a beta-propeller domain.

Quick facts Identifiers, Symbol ...
Kelch motif
Structure of Galactose oxidase containing kelch repeats.[1]
Identifiers
SymbolKelch_1
PfamPF01344
InterProIPR006652
SMARTKelch
SCOP21gof / SCOPe / SUPFAM
OPM superfamily319
OPM protein3ii7
Available protein structures:
PDB  IPR006652 PF01344 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
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Quick facts Identifiers, Symbol ...
Kelch motif
Identifiers
SymbolKelch_2
PfamPF07646
Pfam clanCL0186
InterProIPR011498
SCOP21gof / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Available protein structures:
PDB  IPR011498 PF07646 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
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Quick facts Galactose oxidase, central domain, Identifiers ...
Galactose oxidase, central domain
Identifiers
SymbolKelch_3
PfamPF13415
Pfam clanCL0186
Available protein structures:
PDB  PF13415 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
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Quick facts Galactose oxidase, central domain, Identifiers ...
Galactose oxidase, central domain
Identifiers
SymbolKelch_4
PfamPF13418
Pfam clanCL0186
Available protein structures:
PDB  PF13418 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
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Quick facts Identifiers, Symbol ...
Kelch motif
Identifiers
SymbolKelch_5
PfamPF13854
Pfam clanCL0186
Available protein structures:
PDB  PF13854 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
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Quick facts Identifiers, Symbol ...
Kelch motif
Identifiers
SymbolKelch_6
PfamPF13964
Pfam clanCL0186
Available protein structures:
PDB  PF13964 (ECOD; PDBsum)  
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Proteins containing Kelch motifs

The Kelch motif is widely found in eukaryotic and bacterial species. Notably the human genome contains around 100 proteins containing the Kelch motif. Within individual proteins the motif occurs multiple times. For example, the motif appears 6 times in Drosophila egg-chamber regulatory protein. The motif is also found in mouse protein MIPP[3] and in a number of poxviruses. In addition, kelch repeats have been recognised in alpha- and beta-scruin,[4][5] in galactose oxidase from the fungus Dactylium dendroides,[6][7] and in the Escherichia coli NanM protein, a sialic acid mutarotase.[8]

Structure

The structure of galactose oxidase reveals that the repeated Kelch sequence motif corresponds to a 4-stranded anti-parallel beta-sheet motif that forms the repeat unit in a super-barrel structural fold commonly known as a beta propeller.[9]

Function

The known functions of kelch-containing proteins are diverse:

  • scruin is an actin cross-linking protein;
  • galactose oxidase catalyses the oxidation of the hydroxyl group at the C6 position in D-galactose;
  • neuraminidase hydrolyses sialic acid residues from glycoproteins;
  • NanM is a sialic acid mutarotase, involved in efficient utilisation of sialic acid by bacteria;
  • kelch may have a cytoskeletal function, as it is localised to the actin-rich ring canals that connect the 15 nurse cells to the developing oocyte in Drosophila.[4]

See also

References

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