MAM

Domain in meprin, A5, receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase mu (and others)
MAM
SMART accession number:SM00137
Description: Likely to have an adhesive function. Mutations in the meprin MAM domain affect noncovalent associations within meprin oligomers. In receptor tyrosine phosphatase mu-like molecules the MAM domain is important for homophilic cell-cell interactions.
Interpro abstract (IPR000998): A 170 amino acid domain, the so-called MAM domain, has been recognised in the extracellular region of functionally diverse proteins (PUBMED:8387703). These proteins have a modular, receptor-like architecture comprising a signal peptide, an N-terminal extracellular domain, a single transmembrane domain and an intracellular domain. Such proteins include meprin (a cell surface glycoprotein) (PUBMED:1374387); A5 antigen (a developmentally-regulated cell surface protein) (PUBMED:1908252); and receptor-like tyrosine protein phosphatase (PUBMED:1655529). The MAM domain is thought to have an adhesive function. It contains 4 conserved cysteine residues, which probably form disulphide bridges.
GO component:membrane (GO:0016020)
Family alignment:
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There are 829 MAM domains in 422 proteins in SMART's nrdb database.

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