HHsearch alignment for GI: 254780243 and conserved domain: TIGR01309

>TIGR01309 L30P_arch ribosomal protein L30P; InterPro: IPR005997 Ribosomes are the particles that catalyse mRNA-directed protein synthesis in all organisms. The codons of the mRNA are exposed on the ribosome to allow tRNA binding. This leads to the incorporation of amino acids into the growing polypeptide chain in accordance with the genetic information. Incoming amino acid monomers enter the ribosomal A site in the form of aminoacyl-tRNAs complexed with elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) and GTP. The growing polypeptide chain, situated in the P site as peptidyl-tRNA, is then transferred to aminoacyl-tRNA and the new peptidyl-tRNA, extended by one residue, is translocated to the P site with the aid the elongation factor G (EF-G) and GTP as the deacylated tRNA is released from the ribosome through one or more exit sites , . About 2/3 of the mass of the ribosome consists of RNA and 1/3 of protein. The proteins are named in accordance with the subunit of the ribosome which they belong to - the small (S1 to S31) and the large (L1 to L44). Usually they decorate the rRNA cores of the subunits. Many of ribosomal proteins, particularly those of the large subunit, are composed of a globular, surfaced-exposed domain with long finger-like projections that extend into the rRNA core to stabilise its structure. Most of the proteins interact with multiple RNA elements, often from different domains. In the large subunit, about 1/3 of the 23S rRNA nucleotides are at least in van der Waal's contact with protein, and L22 interacts with all six domains of the 23S rRNA. Proteins S4 and S7, which initiate assembly of the 16S rRNA, are located at junctions of five and four RNA helices, respectively. In this way proteins serve to organise and stabilise the rRNA tertiary structure. While the crucial activities of decoding and peptide transfer are RNA based, proteins play an active role in functions that may have evolved to streamline the process of protein synthesis. In addition to their function in the ribosome, many ribosomal proteins have some function 'outside' the ribosome , . Ribosomal protein L30 is one of the proteins from the large ribosomal subunit. L30 belongs to a family of ribosomal proteins which, on the basis of sequence similarities, groups bacteria and archaea L30, yeast mitochondrial L33, and Drosophila, slime mould, fungal and mammalian L7 ribosomal proteins This model describes archaeal 50S ribosomal protein L30. These proteins share similarity to the longer eukaryotic 60S ribosomal protein L7 and to the much shorter (~60 residue) bacterial 50S ribosomal protein L30. ; GO: 0003735 structural constituent of ribosome, 0006412 translation, 0015934 large ribosomal subunit.
Probab=98.93  E-value=8.3e-10  Score=73.34  Aligned_cols=55  Identities=27%  Similarity=0.463  Sum_probs=50.5

Q ss_pred             EEEEEEECCCCCCHHHHHHHHHHCCCCCCCEEEECCC-HHHHHHHHHHHHHEEEEC
Q ss_conf             5999973368989899999998383467982898299-789707986211147839
Q gi|254780243|r   10 ITVQQIGSPIRRPSVQRKVLIGLGLNKMNRCRVLDDT-PSVRGMISTVHHLVRIVE   64 (64)
Q Consensus        10 ikItlvkS~iG~~~~~r~tl~~LGL~k~~~~v~~~dt-P~irGmi~kV~hLV~VeE   64 (64)
T Consensus         1 ~AviRiRG~v~v~rdI~dTL~mLRL~~~nh~v~~p~tl~~~~GML~kV~dYvTwGE   56 (160)
T TIGR01309         1 LAVIRIRGTVDVPRDIADTLEMLRLHRVNHCVLVPETLPTYKGMLQKVKDYVTWGE   56 (160)
T ss_pred             CCEEEEECCCCCCCCHHHHHHHHHHHHHCCEEEEECCHHHHHHHHCCCCCEEEECC
T ss_conf             90588722658960668899873000012035630663443302010366545357