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1NF1

THE GAP RELATED DOMAIN OF NEUROFIBROMIN

Summary for 1NF1
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb1nf1/pdb
DescriptorPROTEIN (NEUROFIBROMIN) (1 entity in total)
Functional Keywordsneurofibromin, type i neurofibromatosis, nf1, ras, gap, signal transduction, cancer, growth regulation, gtp hydrolysis, patient mutation, arginine finger, signaling protein
Biological sourceHomo sapiens (human)
Cellular locationNucleus : P21359
Total number of polymer chains1
Total formula weight37982.67
Authors
Scheffzek, K.,Ahmadian, M.R.,Wiesmueller, L.,Kabsch, W.,Stege, P.,Schmitz, F.,Wittinghofer, A. (deposition date: 1998-07-08, release date: 1999-07-20, Last modification date: 2023-12-27)
Primary citationScheffzek, K.,Ahmadian, M.R.,Wiesmuller, L.,Kabsch, W.,Stege, P.,Schmitz, F.,Wittinghofer, A.
Structural analysis of the GAP-related domain from neurofibromin and its implications.
EMBO J., 17:4313-4327, 1998
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Neurofibromin is the product of the NF1 gene, whose alteration is responsible for the pathogenesis of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), one of the most frequent genetic disorders in man. It acts as a GTPase activating protein (GAP) on Ras; based on homology to p120GAP, a segment spanning 250-400 aa and termed GAP-related domain (NF1GRD; 25-40 kDa) has been shown to be responsible for GAP activity and represents the only functionally defined segment of neurofibromin. Missense mutations found in NF1 patients map to NF1GRD, underscoring its importance for pathogenesis. X-ray crystallographic analysis of a proteolytically treated catalytic fragment of NF1GRD comprising residues 1198-1530 (NF1-333) of human neurofibromin reveals NF1GRD as a helical protein that resembles the corresponding fragment derived from p120GAP (GAP-334). A central domain (NF1c) containing all residues conserved among RasGAPs is coupled to an extra domain (NF1ex), which despite very limited sequence homology is surprisingly similar to the corresponding part of GAP-334. Numerous point mutations found in NF1 patients or derived from genetic screening protocols can be analysed on the basis of the three-dimensional structural model, which also allows identification of the site where structural changes in a differentially spliced isoform are to be expected. Based on the structure of the complex between Ras and GAP-334 described earlier, a model of the NF1GRD-Ras complex is proposed which is used to discuss the strikingly different properties of the Ras-p120GAP and Ras-neurofibromin interactions.
PubMed: 9687500
DOI: 10.1093/emboj/17.15.4313
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.5 Å)
Structure validation

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數據於2024-11-06公開中

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