v5.1.0.3
Cicer data from the Legume Information System
| Type | Homologous_superfamily |
| Description | Flaviviruses are small, enveloped RNA viruses that use arthropods such as mosquitoes for transmission to their vertebrate hosts, and include Yellow fever virus (YFV), West Nile virus (WNV), Tick-borne encephalitis virus, Japanese encephalitis virus (JE) and Dengue virus 2 viruses []. Flaviviruses consist of three structural proteins: the core nucleocapsid protein C (), and the envelope glycoproteins M ( ) and E. Glycoprotein E is a class II viral fusion protein that mediates both receptor binding and fusion. Class II viral fusion proteins are found in flaviviruses and alphaviruses, and are structurally distinct from class I fusion proteins from influenza virus and HIV. Glycoprotein E is comprised of three domains: domain I (dimerisation domain) is an 8-stranded beta barrel, domain II (central domain) is an elongated domain composed of twelve beta strands and two alpha helices, and domain III (immunoglobulin-like domain) is an IgC-like module with ten beta strands. Domains I and II are intertwined [ ]. Domain II can be divided into two structural components, both of which comprise α-β sandwich folds. This entry represents subdomain 2 of domain II, the central domain.The glycoprotein E dimers on the viral surface re-cluster irreversibly into fusion-competent trimers upon exposure to low pH, as found in the acidic environment of the endosome. The formation of trimers results in a conformational change in the hinge region of domain II, a key structural element that opens a ligand-binding hydrophobic pocket at the interface between domains I and II. The conformational change results in the exposure of a fusion peptide loop at the tip of domain II, which is required in the fusion step to drive the cellular and viral membranes together by inserting into the membrane []. |
| Short Name | GlyE_cen_dom_subdom2 |