Acetyl-CoA synthetase
From Proteopedia
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==3D structures of acetyl-CoA synthetase== | ==3D structures of acetyl-CoA synthetase== | ||
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[[1pg3]], [[1pg4]] – ACS (mutant) + CoA + AMP – ''Salmonella enterica''<br /> | [[1pg3]], [[1pg4]] – ACS (mutant) + CoA + AMP – ''Salmonella enterica''<br /> | ||
Revision as of 13:06, 6 March 2013
Acetyl-CoA synthetase (ACS) catalyzes the ligation of acetate and CoA to form acetyl-CoA with the conversion of ATP to AMP and pyrophosphate. The acetyl-CoA is used in aerobic respiration to produce energy and electron carriers and for lipid biosynthesis. ACS is an ATP-dependent AMP-binding enzyme.
3D structures of acetyl-CoA synthetase
Updated on 06-March-2013
1pg3, 1pg4 – ACS (mutant) + CoA + AMP – Salmonella enterica
2p20, 2p2m, 2p2q - StACS (mutant) + AMP – Salmonella typhimurium
2p2b, 2p2j - StACS (mutant) + CoA + AMP
2p2f - StACS + CoA + AMP
1ry2 – ACS + AMP - yeast
