In molecular biology, the GYF domain (glycine-tyrosine-phenylalanine domain) is an approximately 60-amino acidprotein domain which contains a conserved GP[YF]xxxx[MV]xxWxxx[GN]YF motif. It was identified in the humanintracellularprotein termed CD2 binding protein 2 (CD2BP2), which binds to a site containing two tandem PPPGHR segments within the cytoplasmic region of CD2. Binding experiments and mutational analyses have demonstrated the critical importance of the GYF tripeptide in ligand binding. A GYF domain is also found in several other eukaryoticproteins of unknown function.[1] It has been proposed that the GYF domain found in these proteins could also be involved in proline-rich sequence recognition.[2] Resolution of the structure of the CD2BP2 GYF domain by NMR spectroscopy revealed a compact domain with a beta-beta-alpha-beta-beta topology, where the single alpha-helix is tilted away from the twisted, anti-parallel beta-sheet. The conserved residues of the GYF domain create a contiguous patch of predominantly hydrophobic nature which forms an integral part of the ligand-binding site.[2] There is limited homology within the C-terminal 20-30 amino acids of various GYF domains, supporting the idea that this part of the domain is structurally but not functionally important.[3]
^ abFreund C, Dotsch V, Nishizawa K, Reinherz EL, Wagner G (July 1999). "The GYF domain is a novel structural fold that is involved in lymphoid signaling through proline-rich sequences". Nat. Struct. Biol. 6 (7): 656–60. doi:10.1038/10712. PMID10404223. S2CID19688996.