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N-terminal domain of MutM-like DNA repair proteins superfamily

SCOP classification
Root:   SCOP hierarchy in SUPERFAMILY [ 0] (11)
Class:   All beta proteins [ 48724] (174)
Fold:   N-terminal domain of MutM-like DNA repair proteins [ 81625]
Superfamily:   N-terminal domain of MutM-like DNA repair proteins [ 81624]
Families:   N-terminal domain of MutM-like DNA repair proteins [ 81623] (3)


Superfamily statistics
Genomes (2,261) Uniprot 2018_03 genome PDB chains (SCOP 1.75)
Domains 3,358 27,348 13
Proteins 3,352 27,330 13


Functional annotation
General category Information
Detailed category DNA replication/repair

Document:
Function annotation of SCOP domain superfamilies

Enzyme Commission (EC)

(show details)
EC termFDR (all)SDEO levelAnnotation (direct or inherited)
Enzyme Commission (EC)Lyases0Least InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)Hydrolyzing N-glycosyl compounds0InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)Other carbon-oxygen lyases0InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)DNA-formamidopyrimidine glycosylase0Highly InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)DNA-(apurinic or apyrimidinic site) lyase0Highly InformativeDirect

Document: EC annotation of SCOP domains

Enzyme Commission (EC)

(show details)
EC termFDR (all)SDEC levelAnnotation (direct or inherited)
Enzyme Commission (EC)Hydrolases0Least InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)Lyases0Least InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)Carbon-oxygen lyases0Moderately InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)Glycosylases0Moderately InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)Hydrolyzing N-glycosyl compounds0InformativeDirect
Enzyme Commission (EC)DNA-(apurinic or apyrimidinic site) lyase0Highly InformativeDirect

Document: EC annotation of SCOP domains

InterPro annotation
Cross references IPR012319 SSF81624 Protein matches
Abstract

Most damage to bases in DNA is repaired by the base excision repair pathway [PubMed15588838]. The repair is initiated by DNA glycosylases, enzymes that recognise specific lesion bases in DNA and remove them. Formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (gene fpg) [PubMed7704272] is a bacterial DNA glycosylase that recognises and removes damaged bases with a preference for oxidized purines, such as 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG). Excision of the oxidized guanine occurs via nucleophilic substitution at C1' by the N-terminal proline. The aminal intermediate thus formed rearranges to the Schiff base, which subsequently undergoes beta- and delta-elimination, resulting in complete removal of the lesion nucleoside from DNA. FPG has thus also a nicking activity that cleaves both the 3'- and 5'-phosphodiester bonds at the apurinic/apyrimidinic site, leaving a gap in the DNA that has phosphate groups on both the 5'- and 3'-ends [PubMed15102448].

The protein contains three structural domains: an N-terminal catalytic core domain, a central helix-two turn-helix (H2TH) module and a C-terminal zinc finger (see PDB:1K82) [PubMed11912217]. The N-terminal catalytic domain and the C-terminal zinc finger straddle the DNA with the long axis of the protein oriented roughly orthogonal to the helical axis of the DNA. Residues that contact DNA are located in the catalytic domain and in a beta-hairpin loop formed by the zinc finger [PubMed12055620].


InterPro database


PDBeMotif information about ligands, sequence and structure motifs
Cross references PDB entries
Ligand binding statistics
Nucleic-acid binding statistics
Occurrence of secondary structure elements
Occurrence of small 3D structural motifs

PDBeMotif resource

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Internal database links

Browse genome assignments for this superfamily. The SUPERFAMILY hidden Markov model library has been used to carry out SCOP domain assignments to all genomes at the superfamily level.


Alignments of sequences to 6 models in this superfamily are available by clicking on the 'Alignments' icon above. PDB sequences less than 40% identical are shown by default, but any other sequence(s) may be aligned. Select PDB sequences, genome sequences, or paste in or upload your own sequences.


Browse and view proteins in genomes which have different domain combinations including a N-terminal domain of MutM-like DNA repair proteins domain.


Examine the distribution of domain superfamilies, or families, across the major taxonomic kingdoms or genomes within a kingdom. This gives an immediate impression of how superfamilies, or families, are restricted to certain kingdoms of life.


Explore domain occurrence network where nodes represent genomes and edges are domain architectures (shared between genomes) containing the superfamily of interest.

There are 6 hidden Markov models representing the N-terminal domain of MutM-like DNA repair proteins superfamily. Information on how the models are built, and plots showing hydrophobicity, match emmission probabilities and insertion/deletion probabilities can be inspected.


Jump to [ Top of page · SCOP classification · InterPro annotation · PDBeMotif links · Functional annotation · Enzyme Commission (EC) · Enzyme Commission (EC) · Internal database links ]