Summary: Lamprin
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Lamprin Edit Wikipedia article
| Identifiers | |||||||||
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| Symbol | Lamprin | ||||||||
| Pfam | PF06403 | ||||||||
| InterPro | IPR009437 | ||||||||
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In molecular biology, the lamprin family of proteins consists of several lamprin proteins from the Sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus. Lamprin, an insoluble non-collagen, non-elastin protein, is the major connective tissue component of the fibrillar extracellular matrix of lamprey annular cartilage. Although not generally homologous to any other protein, soluble lamprins contain a tandemly repeated peptide sequence (GGLGY), which is present in both silk moth chorion proteins and spider dragline silk. Strong homologies to this repeat sequence are also present in several mammalian and avian elastins. It is thought that these proteins share a structural motif which promotes self-aggregation and fibril formation in proteins through interdigitation of hydrophobic side chains in beta-sheet/beta-turn structures, a motif that has been preserved in recognisable form over several hundred million years of evolution.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Robson P, Wright GM, Sitarz E, Maiti A, Rawat M, Youson JH, Keeley FW (January 1993). "Characterization of lamprin, an unusual matrix protein from lamprey cartilage. Implications for evolution, structure, and assembly of elastin and other fibrillar proteins". J. Biol. Chem. 268 (2): 1440–7. PMID 7678258.
[edit] Further reading
- Bochicchio B, Pepe A, Tamburro AM (2001). "On (GGLGY) synthetic repeating sequences of lamprin and analogous sequences.". Matrix Biol. 20 (4): 243–50. PMID 11470400. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&tool=sumsearch.org/cite&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=11470400.
- Robson P, Wright GM, Youson JH, Keeley FW (2000). "The structure and organization of lamprin genes: multiple-copy genes with alternative splicing and convergent evolution with insect structural proteins.". Mol Biol Evol 17 (11): 1739–52. PMID 11070061.
- Fernandes RJ, Eyre DR (1999). "The elastin-like protein matrix of lamprey branchial cartilage is cross-linked by lysyl pyridinoline.". Biochem Biophys Res Commun 261 (3): 635–40. DOI:10.1006/bbrc.1999.1092. PMID 10441478. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&tool=sumsearch.org/cite&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=10441478.
- McBurney KM, Keeley FW, Kibenge FS, Wright GM (1996). "Spatial and temporal distribution of lamprin mRNA during chondrogenesis of trabecular cartilage in the sea lamprey.". Anat Embryol (Berl) 193 (5): 419–26. PMID 8729960.
- McBurney KM, Keeley FW, Kibenge FS, Wrignt GM (1996). "Detection of lamprin mRNA in the anadromous sea lamprey using in situ hybridization.". Biotech Histochem 71 (1): 44–53. PMID 9138528.
This article incorporates text from the public domain Pfam and InterPro IPR009437
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This tab holds the annotation information that is stored in the Pfam database. As we move to using Wikipedia as our main source of annotation, the contents of this tab will be gradually replaced by the Wikipedia tab.
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This family consists of several lamprin proteins from the Sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus. Lamprin, an insoluble non-collagen, non-elastin protein, is the major connective tissue component of the fibrillar extracellular matrix of lamprey annular cartilage. Although not generally homologous to any other protein, soluble lamprins contain a tandemly repeated peptide sequence (GGLGY) which is present in both silkmoth chorion proteins and spider dragline silk. Strong homologies to this repeat sequence are also present in several mammalian and avian elastins. It is thought that these proteins share a structural motif which promotes self-aggregation and fibril formation in proteins through interdigitation of hydrophobic side chains in beta-sheet/beta-turn structures, a motif that has been preserved in recognisable form over several hundred million years of evolution [1].
Literature references
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Robson P, Wright GM, Sitarz E, Maiti A, Rawat M, Youson JH, Keeley FW; , J Biol Chem 1993;268:1440-1447.: Characterization of lamprin, an unusual matrix protein from lamprey cartilage. Implications for evolution, structure, and assembly of elastin and other fibrillar proteins. PUBMED:7678258 EPMC:7678258
External database links
| PANDIT: | PF06403 |
| Pseudofam: | PF06403 |
| SYSTERS: | Lamprin |
This tab holds annotation information from the InterPro database.
InterPro entry IPR009437
This family consists of several lamprin proteins from the Sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus. Lamprin, an insoluble non-collagen, non-elastin protein, is the major connective tissue component of the fibrillar extracellular matrix of lamprey annular cartilage. Although not generally homologous to any other protein, soluble lamprins contain a tandemly repeated peptide sequence (GGLGY), which is present in both silkmoth chorion proteins and spider dragline silk. Strong homologies to this repeat sequence are also present in several mammalian and avian elastins. It is thought that these proteins share a structural motif which promotes self-aggregation and fibril formation in proteins through interdigitation of hydrophobic side chains in beta-sheet/beta-turn structures, a motif that has been preserved in recognisable form over several hundred million years of evolution [PUBMED:7678258].
Gene Ontology
The mapping between Pfam and Gene Ontology is provided by InterPro. If you use this data please cite InterPro.
| Cellular component | proteinaceous extracellular matrix (GO:0005578) |
| Molecular function | structural molecule activity (GO:0005198) |
Domain organisation
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Alignments
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We make a range of alignments for each Pfam-A family. You can see a description of each above. You can view these alignments in various ways but please note that some types of alignment are never generated while others may not be available for all families, most commonly because the alignments are too large to handle.
| Seed (2) |
Full (8) |
Representative proteomes | NCBI (7) |
Meta (0) |
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| RP15 (1) |
RP35 (1) |
RP55 (1) |
RP75 (1) |
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| PP/heatmap | 1 | |||||||
| Pfam viewer | ||||||||
1Cannot generate PP/Heatmap alignments for seeds; no PP data available
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We make all of our alignments available in Stockholm format. You can download them here as raw, plain text files or as gzip-compressed files.
| Seed (2) |
Full (8) |
Representative proteomes | NCBI (7) |
Meta (0) |
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| RP15 (1) |
RP35 (1) |
RP55 (1) |
RP75 (1) |
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| Raw Stockholm | ||||||||
| Gzipped | ||||||||
You can also download a FASTA format file containing the full-length sequences for all sequences in the full alignment.
External links
MyHits provides a collection of tools to handle multiple sequence alignments. For example, one can refine a seed alignment (sequence addition or removal, re-alignment or manual edition) and then search databases for remote homologs using HMMER3.
HMM logo
HMM logos is one way of visualising profile HMMs. Logos provide a quick overview of the properties of an HMM in a graphical form. You can see a more detailed description of HMM logos and find out how you can interpret them here. More...
Trees
This page displays the phylogenetic tree for this family's seed alignment. We use FastTree to calculate neighbour join trees with a local bootstrap based on 100 resamples (shown next to the tree nodes). FastTree calculates approximately-maximum-likelihood phylogenetic trees from our seed alignment.
Note: You can also download the data file for the tree.
Curation and family details
This section shows the detailed information about the Pfam family. You can see the definitions of many of the terms in this section in the glossary and a fuller explanation of the scoring system that we use in the scores section of the help pages.
Curation
| Seed source: | Pfam-B_15493 (release 9.0) |
| Previous IDs: | none |
| Type: | Family |
| Author: | Moxon SJ |
| Number in seed: | 2 |
| Number in full: | 8 |
| Average length of the domain: | 122.90 aa |
| Average identity of full alignment: | 78 % |
| Average coverage of the sequence by the domain: | 98.60 % |
HMM information
| HMM build commands: |
build method: hmmbuild -o /dev/null HMM SEED
search method: hmmsearch -Z 23193494 -E 1000 --cpu 4 HMM pfamseq
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| Model details: |
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| Model length: | 138 | ||||||||||||
| Family (HMM) version: | 6 | ||||||||||||
| Download: | download the raw HMM for this family |
Species distribution
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