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- Q17123408 subject Q9089708.
- Q17123408 abstract "In molecular biology the PIN domain is a protein domain that is about 130 amino acids in length. The PIN domain was named after its identification in the N-terminus of the PilT protein (PilT N terminus). PIN domains function as nuclease enzymes that cleave single stranded RNA in a sequence dependent manner.PIN domains contain three nearly invariant acidic residues. Crystal structures show these residues clustered together in the putative active site. In eukaryotes PIN domains are found in proteins involved in nonsense mediated mRNA decay, in proteins such as SMG5 and SMG6, and in processing of 18S ribosomal RNA. The majority of PIN-domain proteins found in prokaryotes are the toxic components of toxin-antitoxin operons. These loci provide a control mechanism that helps free-living prokaryotes cope with nutritional stress.".
- Q17123408 symbol "PIN".
- Q17123408 thumbnail PDB_1o4w_EBI.jpg?width=300.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q11053.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q1781542.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q18037068.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q18037136.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q215980.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q3495384.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q422529.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q423026.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q898273.
- Q17123408 wikiPageWikiLink Q9089708.
- Q17123408 symbol "PIN".
- Q17123408 type Biomolecule.
- Q17123408 type Protein.
- Q17123408 type Thing.
- Q17123408 type Q206229.
- Q17123408 type Q8054.
- Q17123408 comment "In molecular biology the PIN domain is a protein domain that is about 130 amino acids in length. The PIN domain was named after its identification in the N-terminus of the PilT protein (PilT N terminus). PIN domains function as nuclease enzymes that cleave single stranded RNA in a sequence dependent manner.PIN domains contain three nearly invariant acidic residues. Crystal structures show these residues clustered together in the putative active site.".
- Q17123408 label "PIN domain".
- Q17123408 depiction PDB_1o4w_EBI.jpg.