Protein Domain : IPR014085

Type:  Family Name:  Allophanate hydrolase
Description:  Amidase signature (AS) enzymes are a large group of hydrolytic enzymes that contain a conserved stretch of approximately 130 amino acids known as the AS sequence. They are widespread, being found in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. AS enzymes catalyse the hydrolysis of amide bonds (CO-NH2), although the family has diverged widely with regard to substrate specificity and function. Nonetheless, these enzymes maintain a core alpha/beta/alpha structure, where the topologies of the N- and C-terminal halves are similar. AS enzymes characteristically have a highly conserved C-terminal region rich in serine and glycine residues, but devoid of aspartic acid and histidine residues, therefore they differ from classical serine hydrolases. These enzymes posses a unique, highly conserved Ser-Ser-Lys catalytic triad used for amide hydrolysis, although the catalytic mechanism for acyl-enzyme intermediate formation can differ between enzymes [].Examples of AS enzymes include:Peptide amidase (Pam) [], which catalyses the hydrolysis of the C-terminal amide bond of peptides.Fatty acid amide hydrolases [], which hydrolyse fatty acid amid substrates (e.g. cannabinoid anandamide and sleep-inducing oleamide), thereby controlling the level and duration of signalling induced by this diverse class of lipid transmitters.Malonamidase E2 [], which catalyses the hydrolysis of malonamate into malonate and ammonia, and which is involved in the transport of fixed nitrogen from bacteroids to plant cells in symbiotic nitrogen metabolism.Subunit A of Glu-tRNA(Gln) amidotransferase [],a heterotrimeric enzyme that catalyses the formation of Gln-tRNA(Gln) by the transamidation of misacylated Glu-tRNA(Gln) via amidolysis of glutamine.Allophanate hydrolase catalyses the second reaction in an ATP-dependent, two-step degradation of urea to ammonia and C02. This follows the action of the biotin-containing urea carboxylase. Saccharomyces cerevisiaecan use urea as a sole nitrogen source via this degradation pathway []. In yeast, the fusion of allophanate hydrolase to urea carboxylase is called urea amidolyase.In bacteria, the second step in the urea degradation pathway is also the ATP-dependent allophanate hydrolase. The gene encoding this enzyme is found adjacent to the urea carboxylase gene []. Allophanate hydrolase has strict substrate specificity, as analogues of allophanate are not hydrolysed by it [].Allophanate hydrolase belongs to the Amidase signature enzyme family. Short Name:  Allophanate_hydrolase

0 Child Features

0 Contains

1 Cross References

Identifier
TIGR02713

0 Found In

0 GO Annotation

0 Ontology Annotations

1 Parent Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR000120 Family Amidase

2 Proteins

DB identifier UniProt Accession Secondary Identifier Organism Name Length
Brdisv1pangenome1008159m.p PAC:33620542 Brachypodium distachyon Pangenome 2325  
Brdisv1BdTR11A1043484m.p PAC:35696586 Brachypodium distachyon BdTR11a 1729  

6 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            15595822
            17015445
            12032064
            12521300
            6124544
            15796980