Protein Domain : IPR008354

Type:  Family Name:  Glucose-fructose oxidoreductase, bacterial
Description:  Glucose-fructose oxidoreductase (GFOR) catalyses the formation of D- gluconolactone and D-glucitol from D-glucose and D-fructose. It hasone tightly-bound NADP(H) per enzyme subunit, it exists as a homotetramer, and is one of the pivotal proteins in the sorbitol-gluconate pathway. It istargeted to the periplasm of the Gram-negative cell envelope, and belongs to the GFO/IDH/MOCA superfamily. First discovered in Zymomonas mobilis, homologues have also been found in Caulobacter crescentusand Deinococcus radiodurans.GFOR is of great interest as its mechanism of secretion into the bacterial periplasm differs from other precursor proteins of the Twin ArginineTranslocation (TAT) pathway []. Although it exhibits the consensus TAT signal motif (S/T-R-R-x-L-F-K) at its N terminus, unlike other TAT proteins that can be universally secreted across a number of Gram-negative microbes, GFOR is only translocated in Z. mobilis. However, replacing the Z. mobilis signal peptide with one from Escherichia colirestores this function. This observation has led to the suggestion that TAT-dependent precursors are optimally adapted only to their particular cognate secretion apparatus [].Recently, the crystal structure of Z. mobilis GFOR was resolved to 2.5A by means of X-ray crystallography. This revealed that the protein indeed exists as a homotetramer, and has 4 active sites. There are 2 distinct domains: a classical dinucleotide binding fold at the N terminus and a 9-stranded beta-sheet at the C terminus. NADP(H) is bound to the N terminus of the first alpha-helix. Short Name:  Glc-Fru_OxRdtase_bac

0 Child Features

3 Contains

DB identifier Type Name
IPR016040 Domain NAD(P)-binding domain
IPR000683 Domain Oxidoreductase, N-terminal
IPR004104 Domain Oxidoreductase, C-terminal

1 Cross References

Identifier
PR01775

0 Found In

0 GO Annotation

0 Ontology Annotations

0 Parent Features

0 Proteins

1 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            11133954