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1K0M

Crystal structure of a soluble monomeric form of CLIC1 at 1.4 angstroms

Summary for 1K0M
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb1k0m/pdb
DescriptorCHLORIDE INTRACELLULAR CHANNEL PROTEIN 1 (2 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsglutathione-s-tranferase superfamily, chloride ion channel, metal transport
Biological sourceHomo sapiens (human)
Cellular locationNucleus: O00299
Total number of polymer chains2
Total formula weight53763.21
Authors
Primary citationHarrop, S.J.,DeMaere, M.Z.,Fairlie, W.D.,Reztsova, T.,Valenzuela, S.M.,Mazzanti, M.,Tonini, R.,Qiu, M.R.,Jankova, L.,Warton, K.,Bauskin, A.R.,Wu, W.M.,Pankhurst, S.,Campbell, T.J.,Breit, S.N.,Curmi, P.M.
Crystal structure of a soluble form of the intracellular chloride ion channel CLIC1 (NCC27) at 1.4-A resolution.
J.Biol.Chem., 276:44993-45000, 2001
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: CLIC1 (NCC27) is a member of the highly conserved class of chloride ion channels that exists in both soluble and integral membrane forms. Purified CLIC1 can integrate into synthetic lipid bilayers forming a chloride channel with similar properties to those observed in vivo. The structure of the soluble form of CLIC1 has been determined at 1.4-A resolution. The protein is monomeric and structurally homologous to the glutathione S-transferase superfamily, and it has a redox-active site resembling glutaredoxin. The structure of the complex of CLIC1 with glutathione shows that glutathione occupies the redox-active site, which is adjacent to an open, elongated slot lined by basic residues. Integration of CLIC1 into the membrane is likely to require a major structural rearrangement, probably of the N-domain (residues 1-90), with the putative transmembrane helix arising from residues in the vicinity of the redox-active site. The structure indicates that CLIC1 is likely to be controlled by redox-dependent processes.
PubMed: 11551966
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M107804200
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.4 Å)
Structure validation

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