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Protein Domain : Biotin--acetyl-CoA-carboxylase ligase

Primary Identifier  IPR004408 Type  Family
Short Name  Biotin_CoA_COase_ligase
description  The biotin operon of Escherichia coli contains 5 structural genes involved in the synthesis of biotin. Transcription of the operon is regulated via one of these proteins, the biotin ligase BirA. BirA is an asymetric protein with 3 specific domains - an N-terminal DNA-binding domain, a central catalytic domain and a C-terminal of unknown function. The ligase reaction intermediate, biotinyl-5'-AMP, is the co-repressor that triggers DNA binding by BirA.The α-helical N-terminal domain of the BirA protein has the helix-turn-helix structure of DNA-binding proteins with a central DNA recognition helix. BirA undergoes several conformational changes related to repressor function and the N-terminal DNA-binding function is connected to the rest of the molecule through a hinge which will allow relocation of the domains during the reaction []. Biotin-binding causes a large structural change thought to facilitate ATP-binding.Two repressor molecules form the operator-repressor complex, with dimer formation occuring simultaneously with DNA binding. DNA-binding may also cause a conformational change which allows this co-operative interaction. In the dimer structure, the β-sheets in the central domain of each monomer are arranged side-by-side to form a single, seamless β-sheet. The apparent orthologs among the eukaryotes are larger proteins that contain a domain with high sequence homology to BirA.

1 Child Features

0 Parent Features

8 Protein Domain Regions