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Results 1 - 10 of 12 > >>
EC Number General Information Commentary Reference
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7evolution ThiD is a member of the ribokinase family, but differs from other members in catalyzing two consecutive phosphorylations. The other members of the family catalyze only the phosphorylation of a hydroxymethyl group to give a monophosphate, i.e. the equivalent of the HMP kinase reaction. The HMP kinase activity of ThiD is hence presumably ancestral and the HMP-P kinase activity is an evolutionary novelty 758754
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7evolution ThiN is a versatile domain of transcriptional repressors and catalytic enzymes of thiamine biosynthesis in archaea, residues that distinguish catalytic from noncatalytic ThiN domains, overview. Structural architecture comparisons of ThiD, ThiE, and ThiN domain-containing proteins in select haloarchaea 759429
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7metabolism the enzyme is involved in the de novo pathway of thiamine biosynthesis in Haloferax volcanii. Thiamine biosynthesis in archaea is regulated by a transcriptional repressor, ThiR, and not by a riboswitch -, 759429
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7metabolism the enzyme takes part in the bacterial thiamin biosynthesis and salvage pathways, overview -, 758754
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7metabolism the salvage of HMP is accomplished by its phosphorylation to HMP-P by the HMP kinase activity (HMPK) 758702
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7more molecular dynamics simulation shows that Salmonella typhimurium StHMPPK and Thermus thermophilus TtHMPPK have striking differences in their conformational flexibility, which can be correlated with the hydrophobic packing and electrostatic interaction network given mainly by salt bridge bonds, but interestingly not by the number of hydrogen bond interactions as reported for other thermophilic enzymes, stucture comparisons, all-atom explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulation of StHMPPK and TtHMPPK, overview 758702
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7physiological function the bifunctional canonical kinase (ThiD) that converts the thiamin biosynthesis intermediate hydroxymethylpyrimidine (HMP) monophosphate into the diphosphate (EC 2.7.4.7) can also very efficiently convert free HMP into the monophosphate (EC 2.7.1.49) in prokaryotes, plants, and fungi. This HMP kinase activity enables salvage of HMP, but it is not substrate-specific and so allows toxic HMP analogues and damage products to infiltrate the thiamin biosynthesis pathway -, 758754
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7physiological function the enzyme catalyzes an essential step for the biosynthesis of thiamin pyrophosphate 758702
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7physiological function the enzyme is involved in biosynthesis of thiamine -, 759429
Show all pathways known for 2.7.4.7Display the word mapDisplay the reaction diagram Show all sequences 2.7.4.7physiological function the hydroxymethylpyrimidine phosphate kinases (HMPPK) encoded by the thiD gene are involved in the thiamine biosynthesis pathway, can perform two consecutive phosphorylations of 4-amino-5-hydroxymethyl-2-methyl pyrimidine (HMP) and are found in thermophilic and mesophilic bacteria. The enzyme StHMPPK is able to catalyze two related reactions in consecutive steps, besides the phosphorylation of HMP to give HMP-P (EC 2.7.1.49), the same enzyme catalyzes the phosphorylation of its reaction product to generate hydroxymethylpyrimidine pyrophosphate (HMPPK) being this last reaction an essential step for the biosynthesis of thiamin diphosphate -, 758702
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