Structure of CheA, a signal-transducing histidine kinase.

Article Details

Citation

Bilwes AM, Alex LA, Crane BR, Simon MI

Structure of CheA, a signal-transducing histidine kinase.

Cell. 1999 Jan 8;96(1):131-41.

PubMed ID
9989504 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Histidine kinases allow bacteria, plants, and fungi to sense and respond to their environment. The 2.6 A resolution crystal structure of Thermotoga maritima CheA (290-671) histidine kinase reveals a dimer where the functions of dimerization, ATP binding, and regulation are segregated into domains. The kinase domain is unlike Ser/Thr/Tyr kinases but resembles two ATPases, Gyrase B and Hsp90. Structural analogies within this superfamily suggest that the P1 domain of CheA provides the nucleophilic histidine and activating glutamate for phosphotransfer. The regulatory domain, which binds the homologous receptor-coupling protein CheW, topologically resembles two SH3 domains and provides different protein recognition surfaces at each end. The dimerization domain forms a central four-helix bundle about which the kinase and regulatory domains pivot on conserved hinges to modulate transphosphorylation. Different subunit conformations suggest that relative domain motions link receptor response to kinase activity.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Chemotaxis protein CheAQ56310Details