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Protein Domain : RNA 3'-terminal phosphate cyclase, insert domain

Primary Identifier  IPR013791 Type  Domain
Short Name  RNA3'-term_phos_cycl_insert
description  RNA cyclases are a family of RNA-modifying enzymes that are conserved in eukaryotes, bacteria and archaea. RNA 3'-terminal phosphate cyclase () [, ]catalyses the conversion of 3'-phosphate to a 2',3'-cyclic phosphodiester at the end of RNA.ATP + RNA 3'-terminal-phosphate = AMP + diphosphate + RNA terminal-2',3'-cyclic-phosphateThese enzymes might be responsible for production of the cyclic phosphate RNA ends that are known to be required by many RNA ligases in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes.RNA cyclase is a protein of from 36 to 42kDa. The best conserved region is aglycine-rich stretch of residues located in the central part of the sequence and which is reminiscent of various ATP, GTP or AMP glycine-rich loops.The crystal structure of RNA 3'-terminal phosphate cyclase shows that each molecule consists of two domains. The larger domain contains three repeats of a folding unit comprising two parallel alpha helices and a four-stranded beta sheet; this fold was previously identified in translation initiation factor 3 (IF3). The large domain is similar to one of the two domains of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine enolpyruvyl transferase. The smaller insert domain disrupts the large domain, and uses a similar secondary structure element with different topology, observed in many other proteins such as thioredoxin []. Although the active site of this enzyme could not be unambiguously assigned, it can be mapped to a region surrounding His309, an adenylate acceptor, in which a number of amino acids are highly conserved in the enzyme from different sources []. This entry represents the small insert domain that interrupts the large repetitive domain.

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10 Protein Domain Regions