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Genome-wide Analysis of Substrate Specificities of the Escherichia coil Haloacid Dehalogenase-like Phosphatase Family.

Authors :
Kuznetsova, Ekaterina
Proudfoot, Michael
Gonzalez, Claudio F.
Brown, Greg
Omeichenko, Marina V.
Borozan, Ivan
Carme, Liran
Wolf, Yuri I.
Mori, Hirotada
Savchenko, Alexei V.
Arrowsmith, Cheryl H.
Koonin, Eugene V.
Edwards, Aled M.
Yakunin, Alexander F.
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 11/24/2006, Vol. 281 Issue 47, p36149-36161. 13p. 2 Diagrams, 2 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Haloacid dehalogenase (HAD)-like hydrolases are a vast super- family of largely uncharacterized enzymes, with a few members shown to possess phosphatase, β-phosphoglucomutase, phosphonatase, and dehalogenase activities. Using a representative set of 80 phosphorylated substrates, we characterized the substrate specificities of 23 soluble HADs encoded in the Escherichia coli genome. We identified small molecule phosphatase activity in 21 HADs and β-phosphoglucomutase activity in one protein. The E. coli HAD phosphatases show high catalytic efficiency and affinity to a wide range of phosphorylated metabolites that are intermediates of various metabolic reactions. Rather than following the classical "one enzyme-one substrate" model, most of the E. coli HADs show remarkably broad and overlapping substrate spectra. At least 12 reactions catalyzed by HADs currently have no EC numbers assigned in Enzyme Nomenclature. Surprisingly, most HADs hydrolyzed small phosphodonors (acetyl phosphate, carbamoyl phosphate, and phosphoramidate), which also serve as substrates for autophosphorylation of the receiver domains of the two-component signal transduction systems. The physiological relevance of the phosphatase activity with the preferred substrate was validated in vivo for one of the HADs, YniC. Many of the secondary activities of HADs might have no immediate physiological function but could comprise a reservoir for evolution of novel phosphatases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
281
Issue :
47
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23419018
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M605449200