In molecular biology, the forkhead-associated domain (FHA domain) is a phosphopeptide recognition domain found in many regulatory proteins.[1] It displays specificity for phosphothreonine-containing epitopes but will also recognise phosphotyrosine with relatively high affinity. It spans approximately 80-100 amino acid residues folded into an 11-stranded beta sandwich, which sometimes contains small helical insertions between the loops connecting the strands.[2]
The forkhead associated (FHA) domain of polynucleotide kinase phosphatase (PNKP) is necessary for the recruitment of PNKP to damage sites in DNA.[3] PNKP is active in the repair of DNA damage by the processes of base excision repair, single-strand break repair, and non-homologous end joining in the case of double strand breaks.[3] In these activities, PNKP acts both as a kinase and a phosphatase in the ligation of DNA ends. The kinase domain phosphorylates 5' hydroxyl ends, and the phosphatase domain removes phosphates from 3' ends. These activities, acting together, prepare single-strand breaks with damaged termini for ligation.
References
^Hofmann K, Bucher P (September 1995). "The FHA domain: a putative nuclear signalling domain found in protein kinases and transcription factors". Trends in Biochemical Sciences. 20 (9): 347–9. doi:10.1016/S0968-0004(00)89072-6. PMID7482699.
^ abTsukada K, Shimada M, Imamura R, Saikawa K, Ishiai M, Matsumoto Y. The FHA domain of PNKP is essential for its recruitment to DNA damage sites and maintenance of genome stability. Mutat Res. 2021 Jan-Jun;822:111727. doi: 10.1016/j.mrfmmm.2020.111727. Epub 2020 Nov 2. PMID 33220551