Journal:JBSD:19
From Proteopedia
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The nitrilase, superfamily of protein enzyme, has in total over 180 known members. It includes a variety of thiol amidase enzymes involved in biosynthesis in plants, animals, fungi and prokaryotes <ref name="Pace">PMID:11380987</ref>. | The nitrilase, superfamily of protein enzyme, has in total over 180 known members. It includes a variety of thiol amidase enzymes involved in biosynthesis in plants, animals, fungi and prokaryotes <ref name="Pace">PMID:11380987</ref>. | ||
- | All members of this superfamily have conserved the active site residues Glu-Lys-Cys, believed to form a catalytic triad. The consensus sequences flanking the catalytic residues supply the conserved motifs distinctive for all of the branches <ref name="Pace"/>. The superfamily can be classified into 13 branches, nine of which have known or predicted specificity for nitrilase, amidase, and CN-hydrolase reactions. Although the entire family has been considered “nitrilase-related”, only members of Branch 1 have demonstrated nitrilase activity. The remaining branches include enzymes with amidase or amide-condensation activity including aliphatic amidase, amino-terminal amidase, biotinidase, β-ureidopropionase, carbamylase, prokaryotic and eukaryotic NAD-synthetase, and apo-lipoprotein N-acyltransferase | + | All members of this superfamily have conserved the active site residues Glu-Lys-Cys, believed to form a catalytic triad. The consensus sequences flanking the catalytic residues supply the conserved motifs distinctive for all of the branches <ref name="Pace"/>. The superfamily can be classified into 13 branches, nine of which have known or predicted specificity for nitrilase, amidase, and CN-hydrolase reactions. Although the entire family has been considered “nitrilase-related”, only members of Branch 1 have demonstrated nitrilase activity. The remaining branches include enzymes with amidase or amide-condensation activity including aliphatic amidase, amino-terminal amidase, biotinidase, β-ureidopropionase, carbamylase, prokaryotic and eukaryotic NAD-synthetase, and apo-lipoprotein N-acyltransferase <ref name="Brenner">PMID:12504683</ref> . Analysis of the sequences and structures of CN-hydrolases with known three-dimensional structures shows that SA0302 definitely is a member of Branch 10 (Nit and NitFhit) of the nitrilase superfamily. Enzyme activities and substrate specificities of members of this branch are not yet characterized, in contrast to those of the members of Branches 1 to 9. |
The protein contains 261 amino acids and consists of a four-layer αββα sandwich, consistent with the expected CN-hydrolase fold. The monomer consists of two similar sub-domains related by a pseudo two-fold rotational symmetry. The active site is formed by the residues from both the N- and C-terminal sub-domains. The dimer, which was found in crystal and solution media, contains two accessible to the solvent active sites (Figure 1). | The protein contains 261 amino acids and consists of a four-layer αββα sandwich, consistent with the expected CN-hydrolase fold. The monomer consists of two similar sub-domains related by a pseudo two-fold rotational symmetry. The active site is formed by the residues from both the N- and C-terminal sub-domains. The dimer, which was found in crystal and solution media, contains two accessible to the solvent active sites (Figure 1). |
Revision as of 07:58, 5 September 2012
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- ↑ REF
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Pace HC, Brenner C. The nitrilase superfamily: classification, structure and function. Genome Biol. 2001;2(1):REVIEWS0001. Epub 2001 Jan 15. PMID:11380987
- ↑ Brenner C. Catalysis in the nitrilase superfamily. Curr Opin Struct Biol. 2002 Dec;12(6):775-82. PMID:12504683
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