Protein Domain : IPR015928

Type:  Domain Name:  Aconitase/3-isopropylmalate dehydratase, swivel
Description:  Aconitase (aconitate hydratase; ) is an iron-sulphur protein that contains a [4Fe-4S]-cluster and catalyses the interconversion of isocitrate and citrate via a cis-aconitate intermediate. Aconitase functions in both the TCA and glyoxylate cycles, however unlike the majority of iron-sulphur proteins that function as electron carriers, the [4Fe-4S]-cluster of aconitase reacts directly with an enzyme substrate. In eukaryotes there is a cytosolic form (cAcn) and a mitochondrial form (mAcn) of the enzyme. In bacteria there are also 2 forms, aconitase A (AcnA) and B (AcnB). Several aconitases are known to be multi-functional enzymes with a second non-catalytic, but essential function that arises when the cellular environment changes, such as when iron levels drop [, ]. Eukaryotic cAcn and mAcn, and bacterial AcnA have the same domain organisation, consisting of three N-terminal alpha/beta/alpha domains, a linker region, followed by a C-terminal 'swivel' domain with a beta/beta/alpha structure (1-2-3-linker-4), although mAcn is small than cAcn. However, bacterial AcnB has a different organisation: it contains an N-terminal HEAT-like domain, followed by the 'swivel' domain, then the three alpha/beta/alpha domains (HEAT-4-1-2-3) []. Below is a description of some of the multi-functional activities associated with different aconitases.Eukaryotic mAcn catalyses the second step of the mitochondrial TCA cycle, which is important for energy production, providing high energy electrons in the form of NADH and FADH2 to the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation pathway []. The TCA cycle also provides precursors for haem and amino acid production. This enzyme has a second, non-catalytic but essential role in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) maintenance: mAcn acts to stabilise mtDNA, forming part of mtDNA protein-DNA complexes known as nucleoids. mAcn is thought to reversibly model nucleoids to directly influence mitochondrial gene expression in response to changes in the cellular environment. Therefore, mAcn can influence the expression of components of the oxidative phosphorylation pathway encoded in mtDNA. Eukaryotic cAcn enzyme balances the amount of citrate and isocitrate in the cytoplasm, which in turn creates a balance between the amount of NADPH generated from isocitrate by isocitrate dehydrogenase with the amount of acetyl-CoA generated from citrate by citrate lyase. Fatty acid synthesis requires both NADPH and acetyl-CoA, as do other metabolic processes, including the need for NADPH to combat oxidative stress. The enzymatic form of cAcn predominates when iron levels are normal, but if they drop sufficiently to cause the disassembly of the [4Fe-4S]-cluster, then cAcn undergoes a conformational change from a compact enzyme to a more open L-shaped protein known as iron regulatory protein 1 (IRP1; or IRE-binding protein 1, IREBP1) [, ]. As IRP1, the catalytic site and the [4Fe-4S]-cluster are lost, and two new RNA-binding sites appear. IRP1 functions in the post-transcriptional regulation of genes involved in iron metabolism - it binds to mRNA iron-responsive elements (IRE), 30-nucleotide stem-loop structures at the 3' or 5' end of specific transcripts. Transcripts containing an IRE include ferritin L and H subunits (iron storage), transferrin (iron plasma chaperone), transferrin receptor (iron uptake into cells), ferroportin (iron exporter), mAcn, succinate dehydrogenase, erythroid aminolevulinic acid synthetase (tetrapyrrole biosynthesis), among others. If the IRE is in the 5'-UTR of the transcript (e.g. in ferritin mRNA), then IRP1-binding prevents its translation by blocking the transcript from binding to the ribosome. If the IRE is in the 3'-UTR of the transcript (e.g. transferrin receptor), then IRP1-binding protects it from endonuclease degradation, thereby prolonging the half-life of the transcript and enabling it to be translated [].IRP2 is another IRE-binding protein that binds to the same transcripts as IRP1. However, since IRP1 is predominantly in the enzymatic cAcn form, it is IRP2 that acts as the major metabolic regulator that maintains iron homeostasis []. Although IRP2 is homologous to IRP1, IRP2 lacks aconitase activity, and is known only to have a single function in the post-transcriptional regulation of iron metabolism genes []. In iron-replete cells, IRP2 activity is regulated primarily by iron-dependent degradation through the ubiquitin-proteasomal system.Bacterial AcnB is also known to be multi-functional. In addition to its role in the TCA cycle, AcnB was shown to be a post-transcriptional regulator of gene expression in Escherichia coliand Salmonella enterica[, ]. In S. enterica, AcnB initiates a regulatory cascade controlling flagella biosynthesis through an interaction with the ftsH transcript, an alternative RNA polymerase sigma factor. This binding lowers the intracellular concentration of FtsH protease, which in turn enhances the amount of RNA polymerase sigma32 factor (normally degraded by FtsH protease), and sigma32 then increases the synthesis of chaperone DnaK, which in turn promotes the synthesis of the flagellar protein FliC. AcnB regulates the synthesis of other proteins as well, such as superoxide dismutase (SodA) and other enzymes involved in oxidative stress.3-isopropylmalate dehydratase (or isopropylmalate isomerase; ) catalyses the stereo-specific isomerisation of 2-isopropylmalate and 3-isopropylmalate, via the formation of 2-isopropylmaleate. This enzyme performs the second step in the biosynthesis of leucine, and is present in most prokaryotes and many fungal species. The prokaryotic enzyme is a heterodimer composed of a large (LeuC) and small (LeuD) subunit, while the fungal form is a monomeric enzyme. Both forms of isopropylmalate are related and are part of the larger aconitase family []. Aconitases are mostly monomeric proteins which share four domains in common and contain a single, labile [4Fe-4S]cluster. Three structural domains (1, 2 and 3) are tightly packed around the iron-sulphur cluster, while a fourth domain (4) forms a deep active-site cleft. The prokaryotic enzyme is encoded by two adjacent genes, leuC and leuD, corresponding to aconitase domains 1-3 and 4 respectively [, ]. LeuC does not bind an iron-sulphur cluster. It is thought that some prokaryotic isopropylamalate dehydrogenases can also function as homoaconitase , converting cis-homoaconitate to homoisocitric acid in lysine biosynthesis []. Homoaconitase has been identified in higher fungi (mitochondria) and several archaea and one thermophilic species of bacteria, Thermus thermophilus[]. This entry represents the 'swivel' domain found at the C-terminal of eukaryotic mAcn, cAcn/IPR1 and IRP2, and bacterial AcnA, but in the N-terminal region following the HEAT-like domain in bacterial AcnB. This domain has a three layer beta/beta/alpha structure, and in cytosolic Acn is known to rotate between the cAcn and IRP1 forms of the enzyme. This domain is also found in the small subunit of isopropylmalate dehydratase (LeuD). Short Name:  Aconitase/3IPM_dehydase_swvl

2 Child Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR000573 Domain Aconitase A/isopropylmalate dehydratase small subunit, swivel domain
IPR015929 Domain Aconitase B, N-terminal

0 Contains

2 Cross Referencess

Identifier
G3DSA:3.20.19.10
SSF52016

3 Found Ins

DB identifier Type Name
IPR015937 Family Aconitase/isopropylmalate dehydratase
IPR015929 Domain Aconitase B, N-terminal
IPR004406 Family Aconitase B

0 GO Annotation

0 Ontology Annotations

0 Parent Features

3256 Proteins

DB identifier UniProt Accession Secondary Identifier Organism Name Length
165632 D8QVL8 PAC:15415005 Selaginella moellendorffii 608  
404530 D8QVM6 PAC:15410980 Selaginella moellendorffii 325  
79178 D8QVM1 PAC:15422145 Selaginella moellendorffii 527  
443331 D8S0I5 PAC:15412963 Selaginella moellendorffii 949  
119930 D8SLS4 PAC:15415349 Selaginella moellendorffii 187  
132907 D8T624 PAC:15409123 Selaginella moellendorffii 907  
evm.TU.contig_26343.1 PAC:16429430 Carica papaya 287  
evm.model.supercontig_12.301 PAC:16406861 Carica papaya 806  
evm.model.supercontig_29.188 PAC:16416219 Carica papaya 256  
evm.model.supercontig_59.101 PAC:16423107 Carica papaya 617  
evm.model.supercontig_6.311 PAC:16423500 Carica papaya 891  
evm.model.supercontig_87.76 PAC:16427747 Carica papaya 996  
29784.m000362 B9SXB6 PAC:16808465 Ricinus communis 900  
29904.m002982 B9RWL5 PAC:16812627 Ricinus communis 615  
27777.m000279 PAC:16799168 Ricinus communis 997  
27625.m000051 B9TA26 PAC:16798841 Ricinus communis 757  
29600.m000550 B9SDW5 PAC:16803491 Ricinus communis 997  
Cucsa.043950.2 PAC:16953124 Cucumis sativus 811  
Cucsa.043950.4 PAC:16953126 Cucumis sativus 797  
Cucsa.043950.3 PAC:16953125 Cucumis sativus 797  
Cucsa.043950.1 PAC:16953123 Cucumis sativus 900  
Cucsa.129780.1 PAC:16962336 Cucumis sativus 253  
Cucsa.148530.1 PAC:16964165 Cucumis sativus 989  
Cucsa.256250.1 A0A0A0L6U0 PAC:16972510 Cucumis sativus 620  
orange1.1g002785m A0A067FVC5 PAC:18098894 Citrus sinensis 881  
orange1.1g002610m A0A067G720 PAC:18098891 Citrus sinensis 900  
orange1.1g003763m A0A067G724 PAC:18098896 Citrus sinensis 797  
orange1.1g008433m A0A067FVD1 PAC:18098898 Citrus sinensis 565  
orange1.1g002630m A0A067FVH3 PAC:18098892 Citrus sinensis 898  
orange1.1g003617m A0A067G7H0 PAC:18098895 Citrus sinensis 807  

15 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            9020582
            10087914
            15877277
            9813279
            15522288
            1400210
            16850017
            17513696
            15882410
            15009904
            15543948
            15604397
            16524361
            16407072
            17185597