Coatomer WD Associated Region from Coatomer Subunit Alpha; Coatomer subunit alpha, also called ...
324-774
0e+00
Coatomer WD Associated Region from Coatomer Subunit Alpha; Coatomer subunit alpha, also called alpha-coat protein; Alpha-COP; HEPCOP, is a component of the coatomer, which is a cytosolic protein complex that binds to dilysine motifs and reversibly associates with Golgi non-clathrin-coated vesicles, which further mediate biosynthetic protein transport from the ER, via the Golgi up to the trans Golgi network. Coatomer complexes are hetero-oligomers composed of at least an alpha, beta, beta', gamma, delta, epsilon and zeta subunit. It is a heptameric complex that can polymerize into a cage to deform the membrane into a bud. In mammals, the coatomer can only be recruited by membranes associated to ADP-ribosylation factors (ARFs), which are small GTP-binding proteins; the complex also influences the Golgi structural integrity, as well as the processing, activity, and endocytic recycling of LDL receptors. This model corresponds to the WD-associated region (WDAD) found in coatomer subunit alpha and is composed of a beta-propeller and an alpha-solenoid. The WD40 domain is found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly. It typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40. Between the GH and WD lies a conserved core. It forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet. Each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade. The last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure. The residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands allowing them to bind either stably or reversibly.
:
Pssm-ID: 438573 Cd Length: 452 Bit Score: 849.50 E-value: 0e+00
Coatomer (COPI) alpha subunit C-terminus; This family represents the C-terminus (approximately ...
816-1218
0e+00
Coatomer (COPI) alpha subunit C-terminus; This family represents the C-terminus (approximately 500 residues) of the eukaryotic coatomer alpha subunit. Coatomer (COPI) is a large cytosolic protein complex which forms a coat around vesicles budding from the Golgi apparatus. Such coatomer-coated vesicles have been proposed to play a role in many distinct steps of intracellular transport. Note that many family members also contain the pfam04053 domain.
:
Pssm-ID: 462050 Cd Length: 402 Bit Score: 751.81 E-value: 0e+00
WD40 domain, found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions ...
9-318
4.20e-73
WD40 domain, found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly; typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40; between GH and WD lies a conserved core; serves as a stable propeller-like platform to which proteins can bind either stably or reversibly; forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet; instances with few detectable copies are hypothesized to form larger structures by dimerization; each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade; the last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure; residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands; 7 copies of the repeat are present in this alignment.
:
Pssm-ID: 238121 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 289 Bit Score: 244.94 E-value: 4.20e-73
Coatomer WD Associated Region from Coatomer Subunit Alpha; Coatomer subunit alpha, also called ...
324-774
0e+00
Coatomer WD Associated Region from Coatomer Subunit Alpha; Coatomer subunit alpha, also called alpha-coat protein; Alpha-COP; HEPCOP, is a component of the coatomer, which is a cytosolic protein complex that binds to dilysine motifs and reversibly associates with Golgi non-clathrin-coated vesicles, which further mediate biosynthetic protein transport from the ER, via the Golgi up to the trans Golgi network. Coatomer complexes are hetero-oligomers composed of at least an alpha, beta, beta', gamma, delta, epsilon and zeta subunit. It is a heptameric complex that can polymerize into a cage to deform the membrane into a bud. In mammals, the coatomer can only be recruited by membranes associated to ADP-ribosylation factors (ARFs), which are small GTP-binding proteins; the complex also influences the Golgi structural integrity, as well as the processing, activity, and endocytic recycling of LDL receptors. This model corresponds to the WD-associated region (WDAD) found in coatomer subunit alpha and is composed of a beta-propeller and an alpha-solenoid. The WD40 domain is found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly. It typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40. Between the GH and WD lies a conserved core. It forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet. Each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade. The last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure. The residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands allowing them to bind either stably or reversibly.
Pssm-ID: 438573 Cd Length: 452 Bit Score: 849.50 E-value: 0e+00
Coatomer (COPI) alpha subunit C-terminus; This family represents the C-terminus (approximately ...
816-1218
0e+00
Coatomer (COPI) alpha subunit C-terminus; This family represents the C-terminus (approximately 500 residues) of the eukaryotic coatomer alpha subunit. Coatomer (COPI) is a large cytosolic protein complex which forms a coat around vesicles budding from the Golgi apparatus. Such coatomer-coated vesicles have been proposed to play a role in many distinct steps of intracellular transport. Note that many family members also contain the pfam04053 domain.
Pssm-ID: 462050 Cd Length: 402 Bit Score: 751.81 E-value: 0e+00
WD40 domain, found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions ...
9-318
4.20e-73
WD40 domain, found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly; typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40; between GH and WD lies a conserved core; serves as a stable propeller-like platform to which proteins can bind either stably or reversibly; forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet; instances with few detectable copies are hypothesized to form larger structures by dimerization; each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade; the last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure; residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands; 7 copies of the repeat are present in this alignment.
Pssm-ID: 238121 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 289 Bit Score: 244.94 E-value: 4.20e-73
Coatomer WD Associated Region from Coatomer Subunit Alpha; Coatomer subunit alpha, also called ...
324-774
0e+00
Coatomer WD Associated Region from Coatomer Subunit Alpha; Coatomer subunit alpha, also called alpha-coat protein; Alpha-COP; HEPCOP, is a component of the coatomer, which is a cytosolic protein complex that binds to dilysine motifs and reversibly associates with Golgi non-clathrin-coated vesicles, which further mediate biosynthetic protein transport from the ER, via the Golgi up to the trans Golgi network. Coatomer complexes are hetero-oligomers composed of at least an alpha, beta, beta', gamma, delta, epsilon and zeta subunit. It is a heptameric complex that can polymerize into a cage to deform the membrane into a bud. In mammals, the coatomer can only be recruited by membranes associated to ADP-ribosylation factors (ARFs), which are small GTP-binding proteins; the complex also influences the Golgi structural integrity, as well as the processing, activity, and endocytic recycling of LDL receptors. This model corresponds to the WD-associated region (WDAD) found in coatomer subunit alpha and is composed of a beta-propeller and an alpha-solenoid. The WD40 domain is found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly. It typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40. Between the GH and WD lies a conserved core. It forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet. Each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade. The last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure. The residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands allowing them to bind either stably or reversibly.
Pssm-ID: 438573 Cd Length: 452 Bit Score: 849.50 E-value: 0e+00
Coatomer (COPI) alpha subunit C-terminus; This family represents the C-terminus (approximately ...
816-1218
0e+00
Coatomer (COPI) alpha subunit C-terminus; This family represents the C-terminus (approximately 500 residues) of the eukaryotic coatomer alpha subunit. Coatomer (COPI) is a large cytosolic protein complex which forms a coat around vesicles budding from the Golgi apparatus. Such coatomer-coated vesicles have been proposed to play a role in many distinct steps of intracellular transport. Note that many family members also contain the pfam04053 domain.
Pssm-ID: 462050 Cd Length: 402 Bit Score: 751.81 E-value: 0e+00
Coatomer WD associated region; The coatomer, which is a cytosolic protein complex that binds ...
324-752
8.33e-178
Coatomer WD associated region; The coatomer, which is a cytosolic protein complex that binds to dilysine motifs and reversibly associates with Golgi non-clathrin-coated vesicles, which further mediate biosynthetic protein transport from the ER, via the Golgi up to the trans Golgi network. Coatomer complexes are hetero-oligomers composed of at least an alpha, beta, beta', gamma, delta, epsilon and zeta subunit. It is a heptameric complex that can polymerize into a cage to deform the membrane into a bud. In mammals, the coatomer can only be recruited by membranes associated to ADP-ribosylation factors (ARFs), which are small GTP-binding proteins; the complex also influences the Golgi structural integrity, as well as the processing, activity, and endocytic recycling of LDL receptors. This model corresponds to the WD-associated region (WDAD) found in coatomer subunits alpha, beta, and beta' and is composed of a beta-propeller and an alpha-solenoid. The WD40 domain is found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly. It typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40. Between the GH and WD lies a conserved core. It forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet. Each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade. The last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure. The residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands allowing them to bind either stably or reversibly.
Pssm-ID: 438571 Cd Length: 474 Bit Score: 532.27 E-value: 8.33e-178
WD40 domain, found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions ...
9-318
4.20e-73
WD40 domain, found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly; typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40; between GH and WD lies a conserved core; serves as a stable propeller-like platform to which proteins can bind either stably or reversibly; forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet; instances with few detectable copies are hypothesized to form larger structures by dimerization; each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade; the last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure; residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands; 7 copies of the repeat are present in this alignment.
Pssm-ID: 238121 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 289 Bit Score: 244.94 E-value: 4.20e-73
WD40 domain, found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions ...
2-163
3.03e-38
WD40 domain, found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly; typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40; between GH and WD lies a conserved core; serves as a stable propeller-like platform to which proteins can bind either stably or reversibly; forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet; instances with few detectable copies are hypothesized to form larger structures by dimerization; each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade; the last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure; residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands; 7 copies of the repeat are present in this alignment.
Pssm-ID: 238121 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 289 Bit Score: 145.17 E-value: 3.03e-38
Coatomer WD Associated Region from Coatomer Subunit Beta and Beta'; Coatomer subunit beta', ...
424-775
4.84e-24
Coatomer WD Associated Region from Coatomer Subunit Beta and Beta'; Coatomer subunit beta', also called beta'-coat protein; beta'-COP; p102, is a component of the coatomer, which is a cytosolic protein complex that binds to dilysine motifs and reversibly associates with Golgi non-clathrin-coated vesicles, which further mediate biosynthetic protein transport from the ER, via the Golgi up to the trans Golgi network. Coatomer complexes are hetero-oligomers composed of at least an alpha, beta, beta', gamma, delta, epsilon and zeta subunit. It is a heptameric complex that can polymerize into a cage to deform the membrane into a bud. This model corresponds to the WD-associated (WDAD) region found in coatomer subunits beta and beta' and is composed of a beta-propeller and an alpha-solenoid. The WD40 domain is found in a number of eukaryotic proteins that cover a wide variety of functions including adaptor/regulatory modules in signal transduction, pre-mRNA processing and cytoskeleton assembly. It typically contains a GH dipeptide 11-24 residues from its N-terminus and the WD dipeptide at its C-terminus and is 40 residues long, hence the name WD40. Between the GH and WD lies a conserved core. It forms a propeller-like structure with several blades where each blade is composed of a four-stranded anti-parallel b-sheet. Each WD40 sequence repeat forms the first three strands of one blade and the last strand in the next blade. The last C-terminal WD40 repeat completes the blade structure of the first WD40 repeat to create the closed ring propeller-structure. The residues on the top and bottom surface of the propeller are proposed to coordinate interactions with other proteins and/or small ligands allowing them to bind either stably or reversibly.
Pssm-ID: 438572 Cd Length: 475 Bit Score: 107.17 E-value: 4.84e-24
Database: CDSEARCH/cdd Low complexity filter: no Composition Based Adjustment: yes E-value threshold: 0.01
References:
Wang J et al. (2023), "The conserved domain database in 2023", Nucleic Acids Res.51(D)384-8.
Lu S et al. (2020), "The conserved domain database in 2020", Nucleic Acids Res.48(D)265-8.
Marchler-Bauer A et al. (2017), "CDD/SPARCLE: functional classification of proteins via subfamily domain architectures.", Nucleic Acids Res.45(D)200-3.
of the residues that compose this conserved feature have been mapped to the query sequence.
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click on the bars or triangles to view your query sequence embedded in a multiple sequence alignment of the proteins used to develop the corresponding domain model.
The table lists conserved domains identified on the query sequence. Click on the plus sign (+) on the left to display full descriptions, alignments, and scores.
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