Domain Annotation: SCOP/SCOPe Classification SCOP-e Database Homepage

Domain Annotation: SCOP2 Classification SCOP2 Database Homepage

ChainsTypeFamily Name Domain Identifier Family IdentifierProvenance Source (Version)
ASCOP2B SuperfamilyCysteine proteinases 8033587 3001808 SCOP2B (2022-06-29)
BSCOP2B SuperfamilyXPC-binding domain 8033589 3000974 SCOP2B (2022-06-29)

Domain Annotation: ECOD Classification ECOD Database Homepage

ChainsFamily NameDomain Identifier ArchitecturePossible HomologyHomologyTopologyFamilyProvenance Source (Version)
ATransglut_coree1x3wA1 A: a+b complex topologyX: Cysteine proteinases-likeH: Cysteine proteinases (From Topology)T: Cysteine proteinasesF: Transglut_coreECOD (1.6)
BXPC-bindinge1x3wB1 A: alpha arraysX: HTHH: XPC-binding domain (From Topology)T: XPC-binding domainF: XPC-bindingECOD (1.6)

Domain Annotation: CATH CATH Database Homepage

Protein Family Annotation Pfam Database Homepage

ChainsAccessionNameDescriptionCommentsSource
PF01841Transglutaminase-like superfamily (Transglut_core)Transglutaminase-like superfamilyThis domain is found in animal transglutaminases and other bacterial proteins of unknown function. Sequence conservation in this superfamily primarily involves three motifs that centre around conserved cysteine, histidine, and aspartate residues that ...This domain is found in animal transglutaminases and other bacterial proteins of unknown function. Sequence conservation in this superfamily primarily involves three motifs that centre around conserved cysteine, histidine, and aspartate residues that form the catalytic triad in the structurally characterised transglutaminase, the human blood clotting factor XIIIa' [1]. On the basis of the experimentally demonstrated activity of the Methanobacterium phage pseudomurein endoisopeptidase [2], it is proposed that many, if not all, microbial homologues of the transglutaminases are proteases and that the eukaryotic transglutaminases have evolved from an ancestral protease. [3]
Domain
PF09280XPC-binding domain (XPC-binding)XPC-binding domainMembers of this family adopt a structure consisting of four alpha helices, arranged in an array. They bind specifically and directly to the xeroderma pigmentosum group C protein (XPC) to initiate nucleotide excision repair [1]. Domain

Gene Ontology: Gene Product Annotation Gene Ontology Database Homepage

ChainsPolymerMolecular FunctionBiological ProcessCellular Component
peptide:N-glycanase
UV excision repair protein RAD23