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MHX1 | |||||||||||||||||||
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General Information
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| Name: | MHX1 | ||||||||||||||||||
| PlantsT ID: | 27022 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Species: | Arabidopsis thaliana (mouse-ear cress) | ||||||||||||||||||
| Synonyms: | CHR2v01212004, Locus.11828, Model.9909, At2g47600, 51595.m12875, T30B22.10. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Keywords: | arabidopsis-genome7, mhx, caca, cation antiporter, sodium calcium exchanger, potassium, 2.a.19. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Description: |
MHX1 Mg+/H+ antiporter This gene encodes an H+-coupled antiporter that transports Mg2+ and Zn2+ into plant vacuoles. Electrochemical Potential-driven Transporters - Class 3-- Secondary carrier-type facilitators. Transport systems are included in this category if they utilize a carrier-mediated process to catalyze uniport (a single species is transported by facilitated diffusion in a process not coupled to the utilization of a primary source of energy), antiport (two or more species are transported in opposite directions in a tightly coupled process not directly linked to a form of energy other than chemiosmotic energy) and/or symport (two or more species are transported together in the same direction in a tightly coupled process not directly linked to a form of energy other than chemiosmotic energy). These systems are usually stereospecific. Solute:solute countertransport is a characteristic feature of secondary carriers. Porters(uniporters,symporters,antiporters)-- Transport systems are included in this subclass if they utilize a carrier-mediated process to catalyze uniport (a single species is transported either by facilitated diffusion or in a membrane potential-dependent process if the solute is char ged), antiport (two or more species are transported in opposite directions in a tightly coupled process, not coupled to a direct form of energy other than chemiosmotic energy) and/or symport (two or more species are transported together in th e same direction in a tightly coupled process, not coupled to a direct form of energy other than chemiosmotic energy). 2.A.19 The Ca2+:Cation Antiporter Family-- Proteins of the CaCA family are found ubiquitously, having been identified in animals, plants, yeast, archaea and divergent bacteria. They exhibit widely divergent sequences, and several have been shown to have arisen by a tandem intragenic duplication event (Saier et al., 1999). The most conserved portions of this repeat element, a1 and a2, are found in TMSs 2-3 and TMSs 7-8 in the model of Iwamoto et al. (1999). These sequences are important for transport function and may form an intramembranous pore/loop-like structure. Members of the CaCA family vary in size from 302 amino acyl residues (Methanococcus jannaschii) to 1199 residues (Bos taurus). Even within the animal kingdom, they vary in size from 461 to 1199 residues. The bacterial and archaeal proteins are in general smaller than the eukaryotic proteins (Chung et al., 2001). They have been suggested to traverse the membrane 9 (mammals) or 10 (bacteria) times as a-helical spanners. The E. coliChaB(YrbG) homologue has been found to have 10 TMSs with both the N- and C-termini localized to the periplasm. Each homologous half of the internally duplicated protein has 5 TMS with opposite orientation in the membrane (Saaf et al., 2001). The mammalian cardiac muscle homologue probably has 9 TMSs. The N-terminus of this protein is believed to be extracellular, while the C-terminus is intracellular (Iwamoto et al., 1999). A large central loop is not required for transport function and plays a role in regulation. In the preferred 9 TMS model for this mammalian protein, the polypeptide chain loops into the membrane after TMS 2 and after TMS 7. The large central loop separates TMS 5 from TMS 6. TMS 2 plus the following loop show sequence similarity to TMS 7 and its loop. TMS 7 may be close to TMSs 2 and 3 in the 3-D structure of the protein (Qui et al., 2001). |
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Families
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Families and groups to which this sequence belongs: |
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This protein is part of the following alignment(s):
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Protein
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| Protein Features: |
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| Protein Sequence: |
1 MASILNQTQE LQESSKVLGH LRCENFFLFP GENTLSDGLR GVLYFLGLAY CFIGLSAITA 61 RFFKSMENVV KHSRKVVTID PITKAEVITY KKVWNFTIAD ISLLAFGTSF PQISLATIDA 121 IRNMGERYAG GLGPGTLVGS AAFDLFPIHA VCVVVPKAGE LKKISDLGVW LVELVWSFWA 181 YIWLYIILEV WSPNVITLVE ALLTVLQYGL LLVHAYAQDK RWPYLSLPMS RGDRPEEWVP 241 EEIDTSKDDN DNDVHDVYSD AAQDAVESGS RNIVDIFSIH SANNDTGITY HTVADTPPDS 301 ATKKGKAKNS TVFDIWKHQF VDAITLETSE SKKVDSIYLR IAKSFWHLLL APWKLLFAFV 361 PPCNIAHGWI AFICSLLFIS GVAFVVTRFT DLISCVTGIN PYVIAFTALA SGTSWPDLVA 421 SKIAAERQLT ADSAIANITC SNSVNIYVGI GVPWLINTVY NYFAYREPLY IENAKGLSFS 481 LLIFFATSVG CIVVLVLRRL IIGAELGGPR LWAWLTSAYF MMLWVVFVVL SSLKVSGVI |
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| Length: | 539 amino acids | ||||||||||||||||||
| Molecular Weight: | 59787.14 Da | ||||||||||||||||||
Gene Expression Data
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Microarray Data in Different Organs and at Different Ages (click on graph to view data) Data downloaded from genevestigator |
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Microarray Data (Click on graph to view legend) Images provided by John Ward at AMPL. |
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Protein History and Links to Sources
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| Main Entry: |
MHX1 ID:27022 MHX1 Mg+/H+ antiporter is linked to these entries: |
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| Current Entry: |
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| Superceded Entry: |
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Strain
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| At2g47600: | Order strain | ||||||||||||||||||
External Resources
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| At2g47600 |
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Community
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| Community Annotations: |
Annotate this entry |
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Chronology
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| Created: | 2007-08-29 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Revision: |
14 September 2007 YL - Merged 215587(AT2G47600.1) 23 January 2002 JT - Updated Annotation |
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A distributed project investigating gene networks that control uptake and accumulation of plant nutrients and toxic metals. Funded by the plant genome program of the National Science Foundation (DBI-0077378). Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation. Questions or comments? Please contact us.
© 2005 Purdue University |
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