Abstract
Treble clef (TC) zinc fingers constitute a large fold-group of structural zinc-binding protein domains that mediate numerous cellular functions. We have analysed the sequence, structure, and function relationships among all TCs in the Protein Data Bank. This led to the identification of novel TCs, such as lsr2, YggX and TFIIIC τ 60 kDa subunit, and prediction of a nuclease-like function for the DUF1364 family. The structural malleability of TCs is evident from the many examples with variations to the core structural elements of the fold. We observe domains wherein the structural core of the TC fold is circularly permuted, and also some examples where the overall fold resembles both the TC motif and another unrelated fold. All extant TC families do not share a monophyletic origin, as several TC proteins are known to have been present in the last universal common ancestor and the last eukaryotic common ancestor. We identify several TCs where the zinc-chelating site and residues are not merely responsible for structure stabilization but also perform other functions, such as being redox active in C1B domain of protein kinase C, a nucleophilic acceptor in Ada and catalytic in organomercurial lyase, MerB.
Highlights
Supported by significant sequence similarity, YacG appears to be related to members of the TRASH family
Ribosomal protein L24 has been grouped with the TRASH family and removed from the nuclear receptor family based on sequence similarity
Based on manual analysis of their structure, the ZFs from these families have been unambiguously grouped under the TC fold
Summary
All these have been grouped under the RING-like family in the present classification. YacG (PDBid 1LV3_A) was placed as an autonomous family in the previous ZF classification because of lack of sequence similarity to any other proteins[4]. Supported by significant sequence similarity, YacG appears to be related to members of the TRASH family.
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