HAND

HAND
PFAM accession number:PF09110
Interpro abstract (IPR015194):

Nucleosome remodelling is an energy-dependent process that alters histone-DNA interactions within nucleosomes, thereby rendering nucleosomal DNA accessible to regulatory factors. The ATPases involved belong to the SWI2/SNF2 subfamily of DEAD/H-helicases, which contain a conserved ATPase domain characterised by seven motifs. Proteins within this family differ with regard to domain organisation, their associated proteins and the remodelling complex in which they reside.

The ATPase ISWI is a member of this family. ISWI can be divided into two regions: an N-terminal region that contains the SWI2/SNF2 ATPase domain, and a C-terminal region that is responsible for substrate recognition. The C-terminal region contains 12 alpha-helices and can be divided into three domains and a spacer region: a HAND domain (named because its 4-helical structure resembles an open hand), a SANT domain (c-Myb DNA-binding like), a spacer helix, and a SLIDE domain (SANT-like but with several insertions).

This entry represents the HAND domain, which adopts a secondary structure consisting of four alpha helices, three of which (H2, H3, H4) form an L-like configuration. Helix H2 runs antiparallel to helices H3 and H4, packing closely against helix H4, whilst helix H1 reposes in the concave surface formed by these three helices and runs perpendicular to them. This domain confers DNA and nucleosome binding properties to the protein [ (PUBMED:14536084) ].

GO process:ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling (GO:0043044)
GO function:nucleosome binding (GO:0031491)

This is a PFAM domain. For full annotation and more information, please see the PFAM entry HAND