Protein Domain : IPR012274

Type:  Family Name:  Alpha-crystallin, subunit A
Description:  The crystallins are water-soluble structural proteins that occur in high concentration in the cytoplasm of eye lens fibre cells. Four major groups of crystallin have been distinguished on the basis of size, charge and immunological properties: alpha-, beta- and gamma-crystallins occur in all vertebrate classes (though gamma-crystallins are low or absent in avian lenses); and delta-crystallin is found exclusively in reptiles and birds [, ].Alpha-crystallin occurs as large aggregates, comprising two types of related subunits (A and B) that are highly similar to the small (15-30kDa) heat shock proteins (HSPs), particularly in their C-terminal halves. The relationship between these families is one of classic gene duplication and divergence, from the small HSP family, allowing adaptation to novel functions. Divergence probably occurred prior to evolution of the eye lens, alpha-crystallin being found in small amounts in tissues outside the lens [].Alpha-crystallin has chaperone-like properties including the ability to prevent the precipitation of denatured proteins and to increase cellular tolerance to stress []. It has been suggested that these functions are important for the maintenance of lens transparency and the prevention of cataracts. This is supported by the observation that alpha-crystallin mutations show an association with cataract formation.This group represents the A subunit of alpha-crystallin. Short Name:  Alpha-crystallin_A

0 Child Features

3 Contains

DB identifier Type Name
IPR002068 Domain Alpha crystallin/Hsp20 domain
IPR008978 Domain HSP20-like chaperone
IPR003090 Domain Alpha-crystallin, N-terminal

1 Cross References

Identifier
PTHR11527:SF36

0 Found In

1 GO Annotation

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0005212 IPR012274

1 Ontology Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0005212 IPR012274

1 Parent Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR001436 Family Alpha crystallin/Heat shock protein

0 Proteins

3 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            7634077
            2688200
            15575808