Glycoside-pentoside-hexuronide:cation symporter family

The Glycoside-Pentoside-Hexuronide (GPH):Cation Symporter Family is part of the major facilitator superfamily and catalyzes uptake of sugars (mostly, but not exclusively, glycosides) in symport with a monovalent cation (H+ or Na+).[1] The various members of the family have been reported to use Na+, H+ or Li, Na+ or Li+, or all three cations as the symported cation.

Identifiers
Symbol?
InterProIPR001927
TCDB2.A.2
OPM superfamily15
OPM protein4m64

Structure

Proteins of the GHP family are generally about 500 amino acids in length, although the Gram-positive bacterial lactose permeases are larger, due to a C-terminal hydrophilic domain that is involved in regulation by the phosphotransferase system. All of these proteins possess twelve putative transmembrane α-helical spanners.

Homology

Homologues are from bacteria, including the distantly related sucrose:H+ symporters of plants and a yeast maltose/sucrose:H+ symporter of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. This yeast protein is about 24% identical to the plant sucrose:H+ symporters and is more distantly related to the bacterial members of the GPH family.[2] Limited sequence similarity of some of these proteins with members of the major facilitator superfamily has been observed, and their 3D structures are clearly similar.

Transport Reaction

The generalized transport reaction catalyzed by the GPH:cation symporter family is:

Sugar (out) + [H+ or Na+] (out) → Sugar (in) + [H+ or Na+] (in)
gollark: Bitcoin mining works by randomly generating data until it hashes to a value with many leading zeros, basically.
gollark: Well, the specific way bitcoin uses it.
gollark: It can be parallelized, yes.
gollark: Bitcoin ASICs just have all the logic for SHA256, directly burned (well, magically siliconed) into hardware.
gollark: CPUs do tons of difficult complex stuff to run general purpose code very fast.

References

  1. Heuberger EH, Smits E, Poolman B (September 2001). "Xyloside transport by XylP, a member of the galactoside-pentoside-hexuronide family". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 276 (37): 34465–72. doi:10.1074/jbc.M105460200. PMID 11408491.
  2. Reinders A, Ward JM (January 2001). "Functional characterization of the alpha-glucoside transporter Sut1p from Schizosaccharomyces pombe, the first fungal homologue of plant sucrose transporters". Molecular Microbiology. 39 (2): 445–54. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2958.2001.02237.x. PMID 11136464.

As of this edit, this article uses content from "2.A.2 The Glycoside-Pentoside-Hexuronide (GPH):Cation Symporter Family", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.