| Standard Name | ALA1 |
|---|---|
| Systematic Name | YOR335C |
| Alias | CDC64 1 |
| Feature Type | ORF, Verified |
| Description | Cytoplasmic and mitochondrial alanyl-tRNA synthetase, required for protein synthesis; point mutation (cdc64-1 allele) causes cell cycle arrest at G1; lethality of null mutation is functionally complemented by human homolog (2, 3, 4 and see Summary Paragraph) |
| Name Description | ALAnyl-tRNA synthetase 3 |
| Chromosomal Location | |
|---|---|
| Note: this feature is encoded on the Crick strand. | |
| Genetic position: 188 cM |
| View Computational GO annotations for ALA1 | |
| Molecular Function | |
| Manually curated | |
| Biological Process | |
| Manually curated | |
| Cellular Component | |
| Manually curated |
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| High-throughput |
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| Classical genetics | |
|---|---|
| conditional | |
| Large-scale survey | |
| null | |
| overexpression | |
| reduction of function | |
| repressible | |
| Resources |
| 81 total interaction(s) for 78 unique genes/features. | |
| Physical Interactions |
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| Genetic Interactions |
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| Resources |
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| Resources |
| Localization | |
|---|---|
| Phosphorylation | PhosphoGRID | PhosphoPep Database |
| Structure | |
| Homologs |
| Note: this feature is encoded on the Crick strand. | |||||||||||||
| This feature contains embedded feature(s): YOR335W-A | |||||||||||||
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| Genetic position: 188 cM | |||||||||||||
| Last Update | Coordinates: 2011-02-03 | Sequence: 1996-07-31 | ||||||||||||
| Subfeature details |
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| Retrieve sequences | |||||||||||||
| S288C only | |
|---|---|
| S288C vs. other species | |
| S288C vs. other strains |
| External Links | All Associated Seq | E.C. | Entrez Gene | Entrez RefSeq Protein | MIPS | Search all NCBI (Entrez) | UniProtKB |
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| Primary SGDID | S000005862 |
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About aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases...
In a process critical for accurate translation of the genetic code, aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aka aminoacyl-tRNA ligases) attach amino acids specifically to cognate tRNAs, thereby "charging" the tRNAs. The catalysis is accomplished via a two-step mechanism. First, the synthetase activates the amino acid in an ATP-dependent reaction, producing aminoacyl-adenylate and releasing inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi). Second, the enzyme binds the correct tRNA and transfers the activated amino acid to either the 2' or 3' terminal hydroxyl group of the tRNA, forming the aminoacyl-tRNA and AMP (5, 6 and references therein).
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases possess precise substrate specificity and, despite their similarity in function, vary in size, primary sequence and subunit composition. Individual members of the aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase family can be categorized in one of two classes, depending on amino acid specificity. Class I enzymes (those specific for Glu, Gln, Arg, Cys, Met, Val, Ile, Leu, Tyr and Trp) typically contain two highly conserved sequence motifs, are monomeric or dimeric, and aminoacylate at the 2' terminal hydroxyl of the appropriate tRNA. Class II enzymes (those specific for Gly, Ala, Pro, Ser, Thr, His, Asp, Asn, Lys and Phe) typically contain three highly conserved sequence motifs, are dimeric or tetrameric, and aminoacylate at the 3' terminal hydroxyl of the appropriate tRNA (5, 6, 7 and references therein).
| 1) | Bedard DP, et al. (1981) New mutations in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae affecting completion of Start. Curr Genet 4:205-214 |
| 2) | Wrobel C, et al. (1999) CDC64 encodes cytoplasmic alanyl-tRNA synthetase, Ala1p, of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 181(24):7618-20 |
| 3) | Ripmaster TL, et al. (1995) Wide cross-species aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase replacement in vivo: yeast cytoplasmic alanine enzyme replaced by human polymyositis serum antigen. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 92(11):4932-6 |
| 4) | Tang HL, et al. (2004) Translation of a yeast mitochondrial tRNA synthetase initiated at redundant non-AUG codons. J Biol Chem 279(48):49656-63 |
| 5) | Delarue M (1995) Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. Curr Opin Struct Biol 5(1):48-55 |
| 6) | Arnez JG and Moras D (1997) Structural and functional considerations of the aminoacylation reaction. Trends Biochem Sci 22(6):211-6 |
| 7) | Eriani G, et al. (1990) Partition of tRNA synthetases into two classes based on mutually exclusive sets of sequence motifs. Nature 347(6289):203-6 |





