Summary
Amino acid kinase family
This family includes kinases that phosphorylate a variety of amino acid substrates, as well as uridylate kinase and carbamate kinase. This family includes: Aspartokinase EC:2.7.2.4, P00561. Acetylglutamate kinase EC:2.7.2.8, Q07905. Glutamate 5-kinase EC:2.7.2.11, P07005. Uridylate kinase EC:2.7.4.-, P29464. Carbamate kinase EC:2.7.2.2, O96432.
Literature references
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Ramon-Maiques S, Marina A, Uriarte M, Fita I, Rubio V; , J Mol Biol 2000;299:463-476.: The 1.5 A resolution crystal structure of the carbamate kinase-like carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from the hyperthermophilic Archaeon pyrococcus furiosus, bound to ADP, confirms that this thermostable enzyme is a carbamate kinase, and provides insight in PUBMED:10860751
InterPro entry IPR001048
This entry contains proteins with various specificities and includes the aspartate, glutamate and uridylate kinase families. In prokaryotes and plants the synthesis of the essential amino acids lysine and threonine is predominantly regulated by feed-back inhibition of aspartate kinase (AK) and dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHPS). In Escherichia coli, thrA, metLM, and lysC encode aspartokinase isozymes that show feedback inhibition by threonine, methionine, and lysine, respectively PUBMED:10220897. The lysine-sensitive isoenzyme of aspartate kinase from spinach leaves has a subunit composition of 4 large and 4 small subunits PUBMED:9584993.
In plants although the control of carbon fixation and nitrogen assimilation has been studied in detail, relatively little is known about the regulation of carbon and nitrogen flow into amino acids. The metabolic regulation of expression of an Arabidopsis thaliana aspartate kinase/homoserine dehydrogenase (AK/HSD) gene, which encodes two linked key enzymes in the biosynthetic pathway of aspartate family amino acids has been studied PUBMED:9501134. The conversion of aspartate into either the storage amino acid asparagine or aspartate family amino acids may be subject to a coordinated, reciprocal metabolic control, and this biochemical branch point is a part of a larger, coordinated regulatory mechanism of nitrogen and carbon storage and utilization.
Gene Ontology
| Biological process | cellular amino acid biosynthetic process (GO:0008652) |
External database links
| HOMSTRAD: | aakinase |
| PANDIT: | PF00696 |
| PROSITE: | PDOC00701 PDOC00289 |
| SCOP: | 1e19 |
| SYSTERS: | AA_kinase |
Domain organisation
Below is a listing of the unique domain organisations or architectures in which this domain is found. More...
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Alignments
There are various ways to view or download the sequence alignments that we store. You can use a sequence viewer to look at either the seed or full alignment for the family, or you can look at a plain text version of the sequence in a variety of different formats. More...
View options
Formatting options
Download options
Very large alignments can often cause problems for the formatting tool above. If you find that downloading or viewing a large alignment is problematic, you can also download a gzip-compressed, Stockholm-format file containing the seed or full alignment for this family.
You can also download a FASTA format file containing the full-length sequences for all sequences in the full alignment.
The main seed and full alignments are generated using sequences from the UniProt sequence database. However, we also generate alignments using sequences from the NCBI sequence database and the "metaseq" metagenomics dataset.
You can view alignments from these two additional datasets using the form above, or you can download alignments of NCBI or metagenomics sequences, as gzip-compressed files.
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 HMMER2.
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. 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 or full alignments.
Note: You can also download the data files for the seed, full, NCBI or metagenomics trees.
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_100 (release 2.1) |
| Previous IDs: | aakinase; |
| Type: | Family |
| Author: | Bateman A, Birney E, Griffiths-Jones SR |
| Number in seed: | 137 |
| Number in full: | 9015 |
| Average length of the domain: | 236.30 aa |
| Average identity of full alignment: | 20 % |
| Average coverage of the sequence by the domain: | 63.70 % |
HMM information
| HMM build commands: |
build method: hmmbuild -o /dev/null HMM SEED
search method: hmmsearch -Z 9421015 -E 1000 HMM pfamseq
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| Model details: |
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| Model length: | 243 | ||||||||||||
| Family (HMM) version: | 21 | ||||||||||||
| Download: | download the raw HMM for this family |
Species distribution
Tree controls
HideThe tree shows the occurrence of this domain across different species. More...
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Interactions
Structures
For those sequences which have a structure in the Protein DataBank, we use the mapping between UniProt, PDB and Pfam coordinate systems from the MSD group, to allow us to map Pfam domains onto UniProt sequences and three-dimensional protein structures. The table below shows the structures on which the AA_kinase domain has been found.
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