The PTS Fructose-Mannitol (Fru) Family (TC# 4.A.2) is a large and complex family that is part of the PTS-GFL superfamily. It includes several sequenced fructose, mannose and mannitol-specific porters, as well as several putative PTS porters of unknown specificities. The fructose porters of this family phosphorylate fructose on the 1-position. Those of TC family 4.A.6 phosphorylate fructose on the 6-position.
Structure
editThe IIA, IIB and IIC domains of the fructose- and mannitol-specific porters are demonstrably homologous. The IIB and IIC domains of the fructose porters appear to be dissimilar from each other as those of the mannitol porters. The IIB and IIC domains of these porters are homologous to those of the Glc family.[1] However, the structure of the IIA domain of the mannitol porter of Escherichia coli has been determined, and it proved to possess an α2β2α3 secondary structure, a structure which is very different from the β-sandwich structure of IIAGlc. Further, the IIC domains of the mannitol and fructose porters are as dissimilar from each other as they are from the glucose or lactose families. As is true of other members of the PTS-GFL superfamily, the IIC domains of these permeases probably have a uniform 10 TMS topology.[2]
References
edit- ^ Chang, Abraham B.; Lin, Ron; Keith Studley, W.; Tran, Can V.; Saier, Milton H. (2004-06-01). "Phylogeny as a guide to structure and function of membrane transport proteins". Molecular Membrane Biology. 21 (3): 171–181. doi:10.1080/09687680410001720830. ISSN 0968-7688. PMID 15204625. S2CID 45284885.
- ^ Nguyen, Thai X.; Yen, Ming-Ren; Barabote, Ravi D.; Saier, Milton H. (2006-01-01). "Topological predictions for integral membrane permeases of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system". Journal of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology. 11 (6): 345–360. doi:10.1159/000095636. ISSN 1464-1801. PMID 17114898. S2CID 25965070.
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