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Get Free AccessRecently, a superfamily of proteins containing a previously undetected domain with predicted metal-dependent phosphohydrolase activity has been described and designated the HD superfamily, after the principal conserved residues implicated in catalysis (Aravind and Koonin, 1998). In the course of our analysis of ancient conserved regions in microbial genomes (Koonin et al., 1998), we found a distinct version of this domain which is encoded in one to three copies in the genomes of Aquifex aeolicus, Borrelia burgdorferi, Synechocystis sp. and Treponema pallidum, but is dramatically expanded in the genomes of Thermotoga maritima and Clostridium acetobutylicum (Figure 1). Compared with the consensus HD domain (Aravind and Koonin, 1998), this version contains a number of additional highly conserved residues; hereinafter we refer to it as the HD-GYP domain, after the characteristic sequence signatures (Figure 1). This domain was also detected in previously uncharacterized proteins from Wolinella succinogenes (Kreis-Kleinschmidt et al., 1995), Bacillus halodurans (Takami et al., 1999), Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Bordetella pertussis (Figure 1). The HDGYP domain is missing in E. coli and B. subtilis. Remarkably, however, in other γ-proteobacteria, such as Shewanella putrefaciens and Vibrio cholerae, it is present in up to 8 copies (data not shown). While none of the proteins that contain the HD-GYP domain has ever been characterized experimentally, the spectrum of the domains that are associated with HD-GYP in multidomain proteins (Figure 2) suggests that it is probably involved in signal transduction. In Synechocystis sp., both copies of the HD-GYP domain are found in proteins that also contain CheY-like receiver domains of the twocomponent signal transduction system (Pao and Saier, 1995; Volz and Matsumura, 1991). A similar CheY – HDGYP domain organization is found in two T. maritima proteins, TM0186 and TM1147 (Figure 2). Two other proteins from T. maritima, TM1170 and TM1682, combine the HDGYP domain with extracytoplasmic ligand-binding domains, which are closely related, respectively, to periplasmic solute-binding protein components of the ATP-dependent transport systems (Tam and Saier, 1993) and the extracytoplasmic part of methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins of Bacillus subtilis, such as McpA and McpB (Hanlon and Ordal, 1994). Such a combination of an extracytoplasmic ligand-binding domain and a cytoplasmic HD-GYP domain, connected by a transmembrane segment, has the same topology as methyl-accepting proteins and many sensor kinases, which further supports the participation of the HD-GYP domain in signal transduction. Finally, in the Aq_2027 protein from A. aeolicus, the HD-GYP domain is found together with the GGDEF domain (Figure 2). The latter domain has been recently identified in diguanylate cyclases and phosphodiesterases involved in the regulation of cellulose synthesis in Acetobacter xylinum (Tal et al., 1998) and in a variety of bacterial signalling proteins in combination with CheY, PAS, and HAMP domains (Hecht and Newton, 1995; Aravind and Ponting, 1999). The GGDEF domain is often associated with another uncharacterized domain, EAL, in particular, in diguanylate cyclases and phosphodiesterases (Tal et al., 1998; Aravind and Ponting, 1999). Remarkably, however, the combination of the HD-GYP and EAL domains is not seen in any of the currently available microbial genomes. Moreover, the number of copies of the HD-GYP domain in complete genomes generally correlates with prevalence of the GGDEF domain over the EAL domain (Table 1). Furthermore, the HD-GYP family of HD proteins so far is lacking in archaea and eukaryotes and so are the GGDEF and EAL domains. This suggests that HD-GYP domain might be also involved in cyclic diguanylate-mediated signaling. The HD superfamily is related to the cAMP/ cGMP phosphodiesterases that are involved in eukaryotic signalling (Aravind and Koonin, 1998). Therefore is seems plausible that the HD-GYP family proteins are likely to possess a diguanylate phosphodiesterase activity and complement the function that, in the characterized diguanylate phosphodiesterases, is performed by the EAL domain.
Michael Y. Galperin, Darren A. Natale, L. Aravind, Eugene V Koonin (1999). A specialized version of the HD hydrolase domain implicated in signal transduction.. , 1(2)
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Type
Letter
Year
1999
Authors
4
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
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