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IPR006349

Description

IPR006349 is a 2-phosphoglycolate phosphatase, eukaryotic.

<p>This family of sequences represent 2-phosphoglycolate phosphatase which is limited to the eukaryotic lineage. PGP is an essential enzyme in the glycolate salvage pathway in higher organisms (photorespiration in plants). Phosphoglycolate results from the oxidase activity of RubisCO in the Calvin cycle when concentrations of carbon dioxide are low relative to oxygen. In mammals, PGP (also known as Glycerol-3-phosphate phosphatase) [[cite:PUB00097892]] is found in many tissues, notably in red blood cells where P-glycolate is and important activator of the hydrolysis of 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate, a major modifier of the oxygen affinity of hemoglobin. The PGPase enzyme described here is a member of the Haloacid dehalogenase superfamily of hydrolase enzymes. Unlike the bacterial PGP equivalog, which is a member of class (subfamily) I, this enzyme is a member of class (subfamily) II [[cite:PUB00009589]]. These two enzymes have almost certainly arisen from convergent evolution (although these two ancestors may themselves have diverged from a more distant HAD superfamily progenitor). One of the sequences in the group comes from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, a photosynthetic alga. The enzyme has been purified and characterised and these data are fully consistent with the assignment of function as a PGPase involved in photorespiration [[cite:PUB00009590]]. Another, from Homo sapiens (Human), is supported as a member of the family indirectly. Biochemical characterisation of partially purified PGP's from various tissues including red blood cells [[cite:PUB00009591]] have been performed while one gene for PGP has been localized to chromosome 16p13.3 [[cite:PUB00009592]]. The Homo sapiens (Human) sequence maps to chromosome 22. There is indeed a related gene on chromosome 16 (and it is expressed, since EST's are found) which shows 46% identity and 59% positives by BLAST2 (E=1e-66). Presumably, these two genes are isoforms and have the same catalytic function while being expressed in different tissues and may be differently regulated. The sequence from Caenorhabditis elegans, is only supported by sequence similarity. This family is closely related to a family of bacterial sequences including the Escherichia coli NagD and Bacillus subtilis AraL genes which are characterised by the ability to hydrolyze para-nitrophenylphosphate (pNPPases or NPPases). The Chlamydomonas reinhardtii PGPase does not catalyze this reaction and so presumably these two groups have different functions and substrate specificities. Many of the genes in this family have been annotated as pNPPases due to this association.</p>

This description is obtained from EB-eye REST.

Associated GO terms

GO predictions are based solely on the InterPro-to-GO mappings published by EMBL-EBI, which are in turn based on the mapping of predicted domains to the InterPro dataset. The InterPro-to-GO mapping was last updated on , while the GO metadata was last updated on .

GO term Namespace Name Definition Relationships
Molecular function Phosphatase activity Catalysis of the hydrolysis of phosphoric monoesters, releasing inorganic phosphate.

Associated Lotus transcripts 4

Transcript Name Description Predicted domains Domain count
PREDICTED: phosphoglycolate phosphatase-like [Cicer arietinum] gi|502105712|ref|XP_004492869.1| 14
PREDICTED: 4-nitrophenylphosphatase [Glycine max] gi|356532849|ref|XP_003534982.1| 15
Phosphoglycolate phosphatase-like protein; TAIR: AT5G36700.1 2-phosphoglycolate phosphatase 1; Swiss-Prot: sp|P0DKC3|PGP1A_ARATH Phosphoglycolate phosphatase 1A, chloroplastic; TrEMBL-Plants: tr|I3T999|I3T999_LOTJA Uncharacterized protein; Found in the gene: LotjaGi1g1v0488200 15
Phosphoglycolate phosphatase; TAIR: AT5G47760.1 2-phosphoglycolate phosphatase 2; Swiss-Prot: sp|Q8GWU0|PGP2_ARATH Phosphoglycolate phosphatase 2; TrEMBL-Plants: tr|K7LBA1|K7LBA1_SOYBN Phosphoglycolate phosphatase; Found in the gene: LotjaGi6g1v0281700_LC 15

Co-occuring domains 1

A list of co-occurring predicted domains within the L. japonicus gene space:

Predicted domain Source Observations Saturation (%)
TIGR01460 TIGRFAM 1 25.00