The leucine-rich repeat as a protein recognition motif

B Kobe, AV Kajava - Current opinion in structural biology, 2001 - Elsevier
Current opinion in structural biology, 2001Elsevier
Leucine-rich repeats (LRRs) are 20–29-residue sequence motifs present in a number of
proteins with diverse functions. The primary function of these motifs appears to be to provide
a versatile structural framework for the formation of protein–protein interactions. The past two
years have seen an explosion of new structural information on proteins with LRRs. The new
structures represent different LRR subfamilies and proteins with diverse functions, including
GTPase-activating protein rna1p from the ribonuclease-inhibitor-like subfamily; …
Leucine-rich repeats (LRRs) are 20–29-residue sequence motifs present in a number of proteins with diverse functions. The primary function of these motifs appears to be to provide a versatile structural framework for the formation of protein–protein interactions. The past two years have seen an explosion of new structural information on proteins with LRRs. The new structures represent different LRR subfamilies and proteins with diverse functions, including GTPase-activating protein rna1p from the ribonuclease-inhibitor-like subfamily; spliceosomal protein U2A′, Rab geranylgeranyltransferase, internalin B, dynein light chain 1 and nuclear export protein TAP from the SDS22-like subfamily; Skp2 from the cysteine-containing subfamily; and YopM from the bacterial subfamily. The new structural information has increased our understanding of the structural determinants of LRR proteins and our ability to model such proteins with unknown structures, and has shed new light on how these proteins participate in protein–protein interactions.
Elsevier