Hypusine is an uncommon amino acid found in all eukaryotes and in some archaea, but not in bacteria. The only known proteins containing the hypusine residue is eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF-5A) and the archaeal homolog aIF5A. In humans, two isoforms of eIF-5A have been described: eIF5A-1 and eIF5A-2. They are encoded by two distinct genes EIF5A and EIF5A2. The protein is involved in protein biosynthesis and promotes the formation of the first peptide bond. The region surrounding the hypusine residue is highly conserved and is essential to the function of eIF5A. Thus, hypusin
{{chembox | Verifiedfields = changed | Watchedfields = changed | verifiedrevid = 428370486 | ImageFile = Hypusine natural.svg | ImageFile_Ref = | ImageName = Skeletal formula of hypusine | IUPACName = N6-[(2R)-4-amino-2-hydroxybutyl]-L-lysine | OtherNames = N6-(4-Amino-2-hydroxybutyl)lysine | SystematicName = (2S)-2-Amino-6-{[(2R)-4-amino-2-hydroxybutyl]amino}hexanoic acid | Section1 = | Section2 = }}
Hypusine is an uncommon amino acid found in all eukaryotes and in some archaea, but not in bacteria. The only known proteins containing the hypusine residue is eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF-5A) and the archaeal homolog aIF5A. In humans, two isoforms of eIF-5A have been described: eIF5A-1 and eIF5A-2. They are encoded by two distinct genes EIF5A and EIF5A2. The protein is involved in protein biosynthesis and promotes the formation of the first peptide bond. The region surrounding the hypusine residue is highly conserved and is essential to the function of eIF5A. Thus, hypusine and eIF-5A appear to be vital for the viability and proliferation of eukaryotic cells.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).