Protein Domain : Expansin IPR002963

Type  Family
Description  Expansins are unusual proteins that mediate cell wall extension in plants. They are believed to act as a sort of chemical grease, allowing polymers to slide past one another by disrupting non-covalent hydrogenbonds that hold many wall polymers to one another. This process is not degradative and hence does not weaken the wall, which could otherwiserupture under internal pressure during growth. Sequence comparisons indicate at least four distinct expansin cDNAs inrice and at least six in Arabidopsis thaliana. The proteins are highly conserved in size and sequence (75-95% amino acid sequence similarity between any pairwise comparison), and phylogenetic trees indicate that this multigene family formed before the evolutionary divergence of monocotyledons and dicotyledons. Sequence and motif analyses show no similarities to known functional domains that might account for expansin action on wall extension[ ]. It is thought that several highly-conserved tryptophans may function in expansin binding to cellulose, or other glycans. The high conservation of the family indicates that the mechanism by which expansins promote wallextensin tolerates little variation in protein structure.
Short Name  Expansin

0 Child Features

0 Gene Families

1000 Genes

1 Ontology Annotations

1 Parent Features

13 Publications

USDA
InterMine logo
The Legume Information System (LIS) is a research project of the USDA-ARS:Corn Insects and Crop Genetics Research in Ames, IA.
LegumeMine || ArachisMine | CicerMine | GlycineMine | LensMine | LupinusMine | PhaseolusMine | VignaMine | MedicagoMine
InterMine © 2002 - 2022 Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EH, United Kingdom