A large group of biosynthetic enzymes are able to catalyze the removal of the
ammonia group from glutamine and then to transfer this group to a substrate to
form a new carbon-nitrogen group. This catalytic activity is known as
glutamine amidotransferase (GATase) (EC 2.4.2.-) [1]. The GATase domain exists
either as a separate polypeptidic subunit or as part of a larger polypeptide
fused in different ways to a synthase domain. On the basis of sequence
similarities two classes of GATase domains have been identified [2,3]: class-I
(also known as trpG-type or triad) (see <PDOC00405>) and class-II (also known
as purF-type or Ntn). Class-II (or type 2) GATase domains have been found in
the following enzymes:
- Amido phosphoribosyltransferase (glutamine phosphoribosylpyrophosphate
amidotransferase) (EC 2.4.2.14). An enzyme which catalyzes the first step
in purine biosynthesis, the transfer of the ammonia group of glutamine to
PRPP to form 5-phosphoribosylamine (gene purF in bacteria, ADE4 in yeast).
- Glucosamine--fructose-6-phosphate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.16). This
enzyme catalyzes a key reaction in amino sugar synthesis, the formation of
glucosamine 6-phosphate from fructose 6-phosphate and glutamine (gene glmS
in Escherichia coli, nodM in Rhizobium, GFA1 in yeast).
- Asparagine synthetase (glutamine-hydrolyzing) (EC 6.3.5.4). This enzyme is
responsible for the synthesis of asparagine from aspartate and glutamine.
- Glutamate synthase (gltS), an enzyme which participates in the ammonia
assimilation process by catalyzing the formation of glutamate from
glutamine and 2-oxoglutarate. Glutamate synthase is a multicomponent
iron-sulfur flavoprotein and three types occur which use a different
electron donor: NADPH-dependent gltS (large chain) (EC 1.4.1.13),
ferredoxin-dependent gltS (EC 1.4.7.1) and NADH-dependent gltS (EC
1.4.1.14) [4].
The active site is formed by a cysteine present at the N-terminal extremity of
the mature form of all these enzymes [5,6,7,8]. Two other conserved residues, Asn
and Gly, form an oxyanion hole for stabilization of the formed tetrahedral
intermediate. An insert of ~120 residues can occur between the conserved
regions [4]. In some class-II GATases (for example in Bacillus subtilis or
chicken amido phosphoribosyltransferase) the enzyme is synthesized with a
short propeptide which is cleaved off post-translationally by a proposed
autocatalytic mechanism. Nuclear-encoded Fd-dependent gltS have a longer
propeptide which may contain a chloroplast-targeting peptide in additon to the
propeptide that is excised on enzyme activation [4].
The 3-D structure of the GATase type 2 domain forms a four layer
α/β/β/α architecture (see <PDB:1LM1>) which consists of a fold
similar to the N-terminal nucleophile (Ntn) hydrolases. These have the
capacity for nucleophilic attack and the possibility of autocatalytic
processing. The N-terminal position and the folding of the catalytic Cys
differ strongly from the Cys-His-Glu triad which forms the active site of
GATases of type 1 (see <PDOC00405>).
The profile we developed covers the entire GATase type 2 domain.
November 2006 / Pattern removed, profile added and text revised.
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