PHDPHD zinc finger | |
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| SMART ACC: | SM000249 |
| Description: | The plant homeodomain (PHD) finger is a C4HC3 zinc-finger-like motif found in nuclear proteins thought to be involved in epigenetics and chromatin-mediated transcriptional regulation. The PHD finger binds two zinc ions using the so-called 'cross-brace' motif and is thus structurally related to the RING finger and the FYVE finger. It is not yet known if PHD fingers have a common molecular function. Several reports suggest that it can function as a protein-protein interacton domain and it was recently demonstrated that the PHD finger of p300 can cooperate with the adjacent BROMO domain in nucleosome binding in vitro. Other reports suggesting that the PHD finger is a ubiquitin ligase have been refuted as these domains were RING fingers misidentified as PHD fingers. |
| InterPro ACC: | IPR001965 |
| InterPro abstract: | This entry represents the PHD (homeodomain) zinc finger domain [ PUBMED:7701562 ], which is a C4HC3 zinc-finger-like motif found in nuclear proteins thought to be involved in chromatin-mediated transcriptional regulation. The PHD finger motif is reminiscent of, but distinct from the C3HC4 type RING finger. The … expand |
| Family alignment: | View the Family alignment or the Alignment consensus sequence |
| There are 144 042 PHD domains in 86 307 proteins in SMART's NRDB database. | |
Taxonomic distribution of proteins containing PHD domains
The tree below includes only several representative species and genera. The complete taxonomic breakdown of all proteins containing PHD domains can be accessed here. Click the counts or percentage values to display the corresponding proteins.
Predicted cellular role
| Cellular role: | Transcription |
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Relevant references for this domain
Primary literature for the PHD domain is listed below. Automatically-derived, secondary literature is also available.
KEGG pathways involving proteins which contain this domain
This information is based on the mapping of SMART genomic protein database to KEGG orthologous groups. Percentages are related to the number of proteins containing a PHD domain which could be assigned to a KEGG orthologous group, and not all proteins containing PHD domains. Please note that proteins can be included in multiple pathways, ie. the numbers below will not add to 100%.