Members of the Smad protein family function as signal transducers of the transforming growth factor (TGF-beta) superfamily proteins. The human Smad5 protein, a signal transducer downstream of TGF-beta/BMP receptors, is composed of N-terminal DNA binding domain (MH1) and C-terminal protein-protein interaction domain (MH2) connected together by a linker motif. We used homology-modeling techniques to generate a reliable molecular model of the Smad5 MH1 domain based on the crystal structure of Smad3 MH1 domain. Our study presents the structural features of a BMP-regulated, R-Smad subfamily member (consisting of Smad1, Smad5 and Smad8) for the first time. This model provides a structural basis for explaining both functional similarities and differences between Smad3 and Smad5. Also, the structural model of this molecular target would be useful for structure-based inhibitor design because of its high accuracy. The results of our study provide important insights into understanding the structure-function relationship of the members of the Smad protein family and can serve to guide future genetic and biochemical experiments in this area.