EF hand

EF hand
Structure of the recombinant Paramecium tetraurelia calmodulin.[1]
Identifiers
Symbol efhand
Pfam PF00036
InterPro IPR002048
PROSITE PDOC00018
SCOP 1osa
OPM protein 1djx

The EF hand is a helix-loop-helix structural domain found in a large family of calcium-binding proteins. The EF-hand motif contains a helix-loop-helix topology, much like the spread thumb and forefinger of the human hand, in which the Ca2+ ions are coordinated by ligands within the loop. It consists of two alpha helices positioned roughly perpendicular to one another and linked by a short loop region (usually about 12 amino acids) that usually binds calcium ions. The motif takes its name from traditional nomenclature used in describing the protein parvalbumin, which contains three such motifs and is probably involved in muscle relaxation via its calcium-binding activity. EF hands also appear in each structural domain of the signaling protein calmodulin and in the muscle protein troponin-C.

Contents

Binding site

Prediction

Classification

Additional points:

Subfamilies

Examples

Humans proteins containing this domain include:

See also

References

  1. ^ Ban C, Ramakrishnan B, Ling KY, Kung C, Sundaralingam M (January 1994). "Structure of the recombinant Paramecium tetraurelia calmodulin at 1.68 A resolution". Acta Crystallogr. D Biol. Crystallogr. 50 (Pt 1): 50–63. doi:10.1107/S0907444993007991. PMID 15299476. 

Further reading

External links