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Links from Protein

Items: 5

1.

histidine phosphatase family protein

The histidine phosphatase superfamily is so named because catalysis centres on a conserved His residue that is transiently phosphorylated during the catalytic cycle. Other conserved residues contribute to a 'phosphate pocket' and interact with the phospho group of substrate before, during and after its transfer to the His residue. Structure and sequence analyses show that different families contribute different additional residues to the 'phosphate pocket' and, more surprisingly, differ in the position, in sequence and in three dimensions, of a catalytically essential acidic residue. The superfamily may be divided into two main branches. The larger branch 1 contains a wide variety of catalytic functions, the best known being fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase (found in a bifunctional protein with 2-phosphofructokinase) and cofactor-dependent phosphoglycerate mutase. The latter is an unusual example of a mutase activity in the superfamily: the vast majority of members appear to be phosphatases. The bacterial regulatory protein phosphatase SixA is also in branch 1 and has a minimal, and possible ancestral-like structure, lacking the large domain insertions that contribute to binding of small molecules in branch 1 members. [1]. 18092946. The histidine phosphatase superfamily: structure and function. Rigden DJ;. Biochem J. 2008;409:333-348. (from Pfam)

Date:
2024-10-16
Family Accession:
NF012521.5
Method:
HMM
2.
new record, indexing in progress
Family Accession:
3.
new record, indexing in progress
Family Accession:
4.

phosphohistidine phosphatase SixA

phosphohistidine phosphatase SixA exhibits phosphohistidine phosphatase activity towards the HPt domain of the ArcB sensor involved in the multistep His-Asp phosphorelay

Date:
2022-12-20
Family Accession:
10794488
Method:
Sparcle
5.

phosphohistidine phosphatase SixA

Gene:
sixA
GO Terms:
Cellular Component:
cytoplasm (GO:0005737)
Biological Process:
protein modification process (GO:0036211)
Molecular Function:
protein histidine phosphatase activity (GO:0101006)
Date:
2024-05-30
Family Accession:
TIGR00249.1
Method:
HMM
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