Protein Domain : IPR005479

Type:  Domain Name:  Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase large subunit-like, ATP-binding domain
Description:  Carbamoyl phosphate synthase (CPSase) is a heterodimeric enzyme composed of a small and a large subunit (with the exception of CPSase III, see below). CPSase catalyses the synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate from biocarbonate, ATP and glutamine () or ammonia (), and represents the first committed step in pyrimidine and arginine biosynthesis in prokaryotes and eukaryotes, and in the urea cycle in most terrestrial vertebrates [, ]. CPSase has three active sites, one in the small subunit and two in the large subunit. The small subunit contains the glutamine binding site and catalyses the hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamate and ammonia. The large subunit has two homologous carboxy phosphate domains, both of which have ATP-binding sites; however, the N-terminal carboxy phosphate domain catalyses the phosphorylation of biocarbonate, while the C-terminal domain catalyses the phosphorylation of the carbamate intermediate []. The carboxy phosphate domain found duplicated in the large subunit of CPSase is also present as a single copy in the biotin-dependent enzymes acetyl-CoA carboxylase () (ACC), propionyl-CoA carboxylase () (PCCase), pyruvate carboxylase () (PC) and urea carboxylase ().Most prokaryotes carry one form of CPSase that participates in both arginine and pyrimidine biosynthesis, however certain bacteria can have separate forms. The large subunit in bacterial CPSase has four structural domains: the carboxy phosphate domain 1, the oligomerisation domain, the carbamoyl phosphate domain 2 and the allosteric domain []. CPSase heterodimers from Escherichia colicontain two molecular tunnels: an ammonia tunnel and a carbamate tunnel. These inter-domain tunnels connect the three distinct active sites, and function as conduits for the transport of unstable reaction intermediates (ammonia and carbamate) between successive active sites []. The catalytic mechanism of CPSase involves the diffusion of carbamate through the interior of the enzyme from the site of synthesis within the N-terminal domain of the large subunit to the site of phosphorylation within the C-terminal domain.Eukaryotes have two distinct forms of CPSase: a mitochondrial enzyme (CPSase I) that participates in both arginine biosynthesis and the urea cycle; and a cytosolic enzyme (CPSase II) involved in pyrimidine biosynthesis. CPSase II occurs as part of a multi-enzyme complex along with aspartate transcarbamoylase and dihydroorotase; this complex is referred to as the CAD protein []. The hepatic expression of CPSase is transcriptionally regulated by glucocorticoids and/or cAMP []. There is a third form of the enzyme, CPSase III, found in fish, which uses glutamine as a nitrogen source instead of ammonia []. CPSase III is closely related to CPSase I, and is composed of a single polypeptide that may have arisen from gene fusion of the glutaminase and synthetase domains []. This entry represents the ATP-binding domain found in the large subunit of carbamoyl phosphate synthase, as well as in other proteins, including acetyl-CoA carboxylases and pyruvate carboxylases. Short Name:  CbamoylP_synth_lsu-like_ATP-bd

1 Child Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR005483 Domain Carbamoyl-phosphate synthase large subunit, CPSase domain

0 Contains

3 Cross Referencess

Identifier
PF02786
PS00866
PS00867

0 Found In

1 GO Annotation

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0005524 IPR005479

1 Ontology Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0005524 IPR005479

1 Parent Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR011761 Domain ATP-grasp fold

264 Proteins

DB identifier UniProt Accession Secondary Identifier Organism Name Length
evm.model.supercontig_81.16 PAC:16426919 Carica papaya 807  
AT1G03090.1 Q42523 PAC:19649740 Arabidopsis thaliana 714  
AT1G36180.2 B3H4A7 PAC:19654782 Arabidopsis thaliana 427  
Thhalv10006937m V4LA31 PAC:20187506 Eutrema salsugineum 721  
Ciclev10020266m V4TZS3 PAC:20811447 Citrus clementina 426  
Ciclev10020264m V4TZS3 PAC:20811446 Citrus clementina 426  
Ciclev10019668m V4VVF7 PAC:20811441 Citrus clementina 532  
Ciclev10019586m V4TZR9 PAC:20811440 Citrus clementina 545  
Ciclev10019236m V4TZR5 PAC:20811432 Citrus clementina 647  
Lus10028199 PAC:23166453 Linum usitatissimum 170  
Lus10042899 PAC:23181976 Linum usitatissimum 533  
Lus10042901 PAC:23181674 Linum usitatissimum 418  
Lus10022077 PAC:23160295 Linum usitatissimum 516  
Lus10022078 PAC:23160271 Linum usitatissimum 271  
Potri.008G216500.1 PAC:27036997 Populus trichocarpa 567  
Gorai.005G116100.5 A0A0D2RCZ5 PAC:26805469 Gossypium raimondii 517  
Cagra.7247s0001.1.p PAC:28917646 Capsella grandiflora 1833  
Glyma.20G148800.1.p A0A0R0EBC0 PAC:30523408 Glycine max 819  
Cre08.g373050.t1.1 A0A2K3DHE0 PAC:30773743 Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 2879  
evm_27.model.AmTr_v1.0_scaffold00020.98 W1PWY9 PAC:31554628 Amborella trichopoda 123  
Traes_2BS_91FF9EB1C.3 PAC:31803103 Triticum aestivum 1874  
Traes_3AL_340F1516D.5 PAC:31943768 Triticum aestivum 2006  
Traes_3DL_1E9A9A2CD.1 PAC:31858681 Triticum aestivum 806  
Traes_4AL_FAA4B77C8.1 PAC:31967001 Triticum aestivum 1922  
Traes_5AS_AC11F9C6B.5 PAC:31888199 Triticum aestivum 259  
Traes_5AS_AC11F9C6B.6 PAC:31888198 Triticum aestivum 259  
Traes_5AS_AC11F9C6B.7 PAC:31888200 Triticum aestivum 256  
Traes_5BS_9E62F6722.7 PAC:31819564 Triticum aestivum 413  
Traes_5BS_9E62F6722.5 PAC:31819563 Triticum aestivum 413  
Traes_5BS_9E62F6722.9 PAC:31819566 Triticum aestivum 413  

9 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            10387030
            10089390
            17397987
            11212301
            8916922
            12379099
            7907330
            17451989
            7932737