uridylate kinase, partial [Vibrio cholerae]
uridine monophosphate kinase( domain architecture ID 10001676)
uridine monophosphate kinase catalyzing the conversion of UMP to UTP in pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis
List of domain hits
Name | Accession | Description | Interval | E-value | ||||
PyrH | COG0528 | Uridylate kinase [Nucleotide transport and metabolism]; Uridylate kinase is part of the ... |
1-195 | 1.84e-116 | ||||
Uridylate kinase [Nucleotide transport and metabolism]; Uridylate kinase is part of the Pathway/BioSystem: Pyrimidine biosynthesis : Pssm-ID: 440294 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 238 Bit Score: 330.44 E-value: 1.84e-116
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Name | Accession | Description | Interval | E-value | ||||
PyrH | COG0528 | Uridylate kinase [Nucleotide transport and metabolism]; Uridylate kinase is part of the ... |
1-195 | 1.84e-116 | ||||
Uridylate kinase [Nucleotide transport and metabolism]; Uridylate kinase is part of the Pathway/BioSystem: Pyrimidine biosynthesis Pssm-ID: 440294 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 238 Bit Score: 330.44 E-value: 1.84e-116
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AAK_UMPK-PyrH-Ec | cd04254 | UMP kinase (UMPK)-Ec, the microbial/chloroplast uridine monophosphate kinase (uridylate kinase) ... |
5-195 | 6.69e-108 | ||||
UMP kinase (UMPK)-Ec, the microbial/chloroplast uridine monophosphate kinase (uridylate kinase) enzyme that catalyzes UMP phosphorylation and plays a key role in pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis; regulation of this process is via feed-back control and via gene repression of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (the first enzyme of the pyrimidine biosynthesis pathway). The UMP kinase of E. coli (Ec) is known to function as a homohexamer, with GTP and UTP being allosteric effectors. Like other related enzymes (carbamate kinase, aspartokinase, and N-acetylglutamate kinase) the E. coli and most bacterial and chloroplast UMPKs (this CD) have a conserved, N-terminal, lysine residue proposed to function in the catalysis of the phosphoryl group transfer, whereas most archaeal UMPKs appear to lack this residue and the Pyrococcus furiosus structure has an additional Mg ion bound to the ATP molecule which is proposed to function as the catalysis instead. Members of this CD belong to the Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK). Pssm-ID: 239787 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 231 Bit Score: 308.26 E-value: 6.69e-108
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pyrH_bact | TIGR02075 | uridylate kinase; This protein, also called UMP kinase, converts UMP to UDP by adding a ... |
4-195 | 5.02e-105 | ||||
uridylate kinase; This protein, also called UMP kinase, converts UMP to UDP by adding a phosphate from ATP. It is the first step in pyrimidine biosynthesis. GTP is an allosteric activator. In a large fraction of all bacterial genomes, the gene tends to be located immediately downstream of elongation factor Ts and upstream of ribosome recycling factor. A related protein family, believed to be equivalent in function and found in the archaea and in spirochetes, is described by a separate model, TIGR02076. [Purines, pyrimidines, nucleosides, and nucleotides, Nucleotide and nucleoside interconversions] Pssm-ID: 213681 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 232 Bit Score: 301.08 E-value: 5.02e-105
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AA_kinase | pfam00696 | Amino acid kinase family; This family includes kinases that phosphorylate a variety of amino ... |
62-195 | 1.04e-13 | ||||
Amino acid kinase family; This family includes kinases that phosphorylate a variety of amino acid substrates, as well as uridylate kinase and carbamate kinase. This family includes: Aspartokinase EC:2.7.2.4. Acetylglutamate kinase EC:2.7.2.8. Glutamate 5-kinase EC:2.7.2.11. Uridylate kinase EC:2.7.4.-. Carbamate kinase EC:2.7.2.2. Pssm-ID: 395565 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 232 Bit Score: 67.01 E-value: 1.04e-13
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PRK08210 | PRK08210 | aspartate kinase I; Reviewed |
118-187 | 2.47e-05 | ||||
aspartate kinase I; Reviewed Pssm-ID: 236188 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 403 Bit Score: 43.69 E-value: 2.47e-05
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IPPK_Arch | NF040647 | isopentenyl phosphate kinase; |
153-189 | 2.80e-04 | ||||
isopentenyl phosphate kinase; Pssm-ID: 468614 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 258 Bit Score: 40.28 E-value: 2.80e-04
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Name | Accession | Description | Interval | E-value | ||||
PyrH | COG0528 | Uridylate kinase [Nucleotide transport and metabolism]; Uridylate kinase is part of the ... |
1-195 | 1.84e-116 | ||||
Uridylate kinase [Nucleotide transport and metabolism]; Uridylate kinase is part of the Pathway/BioSystem: Pyrimidine biosynthesis Pssm-ID: 440294 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 238 Bit Score: 330.44 E-value: 1.84e-116
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AAK_UMPK-PyrH-Ec | cd04254 | UMP kinase (UMPK)-Ec, the microbial/chloroplast uridine monophosphate kinase (uridylate kinase) ... |
5-195 | 6.69e-108 | ||||
UMP kinase (UMPK)-Ec, the microbial/chloroplast uridine monophosphate kinase (uridylate kinase) enzyme that catalyzes UMP phosphorylation and plays a key role in pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis; regulation of this process is via feed-back control and via gene repression of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (the first enzyme of the pyrimidine biosynthesis pathway). The UMP kinase of E. coli (Ec) is known to function as a homohexamer, with GTP and UTP being allosteric effectors. Like other related enzymes (carbamate kinase, aspartokinase, and N-acetylglutamate kinase) the E. coli and most bacterial and chloroplast UMPKs (this CD) have a conserved, N-terminal, lysine residue proposed to function in the catalysis of the phosphoryl group transfer, whereas most archaeal UMPKs appear to lack this residue and the Pyrococcus furiosus structure has an additional Mg ion bound to the ATP molecule which is proposed to function as the catalysis instead. Members of this CD belong to the Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK). Pssm-ID: 239787 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 231 Bit Score: 308.26 E-value: 6.69e-108
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pyrH_bact | TIGR02075 | uridylate kinase; This protein, also called UMP kinase, converts UMP to UDP by adding a ... |
4-195 | 5.02e-105 | ||||
uridylate kinase; This protein, also called UMP kinase, converts UMP to UDP by adding a phosphate from ATP. It is the first step in pyrimidine biosynthesis. GTP is an allosteric activator. In a large fraction of all bacterial genomes, the gene tends to be located immediately downstream of elongation factor Ts and upstream of ribosome recycling factor. A related protein family, believed to be equivalent in function and found in the archaea and in spirochetes, is described by a separate model, TIGR02076. [Purines, pyrimidines, nucleosides, and nucleotides, Nucleotide and nucleoside interconversions] Pssm-ID: 213681 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 232 Bit Score: 301.08 E-value: 5.02e-105
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AAK_UMPK-like | cd04239 | AAK_UMPK-like: UMP kinase (UMPK)-like, the microbial/chloroplast uridine monophosphate kinase ... |
6-195 | 3.74e-88 | ||||
AAK_UMPK-like: UMP kinase (UMPK)-like, the microbial/chloroplast uridine monophosphate kinase (uridylate kinase) enzyme that catalyzes UMP phosphorylation and plays a key role in pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis. Regulation of this process is via feed-back control and via gene repression of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (the first enzyme of the pyrimidine biosynthesis pathway). The UMP kinases of E. coli (Ec) and Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) are known to function as homohexamers, with GTP and UTP being allosteric effectors. Like other related enzymes (carbamate kinase, aspartokinase, and N-acetylglutamate kinase) the E. coli and most bacterial UMPKs have a conserved, N-terminal, lysine residue proposed to function in the catalysis of the phosphoryl group transfer, whereas most archaeal UMPKs appear to lack this residue and the Pyrococcus furiosus structure has an additional Mg ion bound to the ATP molecule which is proposed to function as the catalysis instead. Also included in this CD are the alpha and beta subunits of the Mo storage protein (MosA and MosB) characterized as an alpha4-beta4 octamer containing an ATP-dependent, polynuclear molybdenum-oxide cluster. These and related sequences in this CD are members of the Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK). Pssm-ID: 239772 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 229 Bit Score: 258.24 E-value: 3.74e-88
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AAK | cd02115 | Amino Acid Kinases (AAK) superfamily, catalytic domain; present in such enzymes like ... |
8-189 | 2.35e-22 | ||||
Amino Acid Kinases (AAK) superfamily, catalytic domain; present in such enzymes like N-acetylglutamate kinase (NAGK), carbamate kinase (CK), aspartokinase (AK), glutamate-5-kinase (G5K) and UMP kinase (UMPK). The AAK superfamily includes kinases that phosphorylate a variety of amino acid substrates. These kinases catalyze the formation of phosphoric anhydrides, generally with a carboxylate, and use ATP as the source of the phosphoryl group; are involved in amino acid biosynthesis. Some of these kinases control the process via allosteric feed-back inhibition. Pssm-ID: 239033 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 248 Bit Score: 90.58 E-value: 2.35e-22
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AAK_UMPK-PyrH-Pf | cd04253 | AAK_UMPK-PyrH-Pf: UMP kinase (UMPK)-Pf, the mostly archaeal uridine monophosphate kinase ... |
63-189 | 1.81e-15 | ||||
AAK_UMPK-PyrH-Pf: UMP kinase (UMPK)-Pf, the mostly archaeal uridine monophosphate kinase (uridylate kinase) enzymes that catalyze UMP phosphorylation and play a key role in pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis; regulation of this process is via feed-back control and via gene repression of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (the first enzyme of the pyrimidine biosynthesis pathway). The UMP kinase of Pyrococcus furiosus (Pf) is known to function as a homohexamer, with GTP and UTP being allosteric effectors. Like other related enzymes (carbamate kinase, aspartokinase, and N-acetylglutamate kinase) the E. coli and most bacterial UMPKs have a conserved, N-terminal, lysine residue proposed to function in the catalysis of the phosphoryl group transfer, whereas most archaeal UMPKs (this CD) appear to lack this residue and the Pyrococcus furiosus structure has an additional Mg ion bound to the ATP molecule which is proposed to function as the catalysis instead. Members of this CD belong to the Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK). Pssm-ID: 239786 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 221 Bit Score: 71.51 E-value: 1.81e-15
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AA_kinase | pfam00696 | Amino acid kinase family; This family includes kinases that phosphorylate a variety of amino ... |
62-195 | 1.04e-13 | ||||
Amino acid kinase family; This family includes kinases that phosphorylate a variety of amino acid substrates, as well as uridylate kinase and carbamate kinase. This family includes: Aspartokinase EC:2.7.2.4. Acetylglutamate kinase EC:2.7.2.8. Glutamate 5-kinase EC:2.7.2.11. Uridylate kinase EC:2.7.4.-. Carbamate kinase EC:2.7.2.2. Pssm-ID: 395565 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 232 Bit Score: 67.01 E-value: 1.04e-13
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pyrH_arch | TIGR02076 | uridylate kinase, putative; This family consists of the archaeal and spirochete proteins most ... |
60-189 | 2.62e-13 | ||||
uridylate kinase, putative; This family consists of the archaeal and spirochete proteins most closely related to bacterial uridylate kinases (TIGR02075), an enzyme involved in pyrimidine biosynthesis. Members are likely, but not known, to be functionally equivalent to their bacterial counterparts. However, substantial sequence differences suggest that regulatory mechanisms may be different; the bacterial form is allosterically regulated by GTP. [Purines, pyrimidines, nucleosides, and nucleotides, Nucleotide and nucleoside interconversions] Pssm-ID: 273956 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 221 Bit Score: 65.79 E-value: 2.62e-13
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AAK_AK-DapG-like | cd04246 | AAK_AK-DapG-like: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AK-DapG-like; this CD includes the ... |
84-189 | 1.16e-05 | ||||
AAK_AK-DapG-like: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AK-DapG-like; this CD includes the N-terminal catalytic aspartokinase (AK) domain of the diaminopimelate-sensitive aspartokinase isoenzyme AKI (DapG), a monofunctional enzymes found in Bacilli (Bacillus subtilis 168), Clostridia, and Actinobacteria bacterial species, as well as, the catalytic AK domain of the lysine-sensitive aspartokinase isoenzyme AKII of Bacillus subtilis 168, the lysine plus threonine-sensitive aspartokinase of Corynebacterium glutamicum, and related isoenzymes. In Bacillus subtilis, the regulation of the diaminopimelate-lysine biosynthetic pathway involves dual control by diaminopimelate and lysine, effected through separate diaminopimelate- and lysine-sensitive aspartokinase isoenzymes. The role of the AKI isoenzyme is most likely to provide a constant level of aspartyl-beta-phosphate for the biosynthesis of diaminopimelate for peptidoglycan synthesis and dipicolinate during sporulation. The B. subtilis 168 AKII is induced by methionine, and repressed and inhibited by lysine. In Corynebacterium glutamicum and other various Gram-positive bacteria, the DAP-lysine pathway is feedback regulated by the concerted action of lysine and threonine. Also included in this CD are the aspartokinases of the extreme thermophile, Thermus thermophilus HB27, the Gram-negative obligate methylotroph, Methylophilus methylotrophus AS1, and those single aspartokinase isoenzyme types found in Pseudomonas, C. glutamicum, and Amycolatopsis lactamdurans. The B. subtilis AKI is tetrameric consisting of two alpha and two beta subunits; the alpha (43 kD) and beta (17 kD) subunit formed by two in-phase overlapping genes. The alpha subunit contains the AK catalytic domain and two ACT domains. The beta subunit contains two ACT domains. The B. subtilis 168 AKII aspartokinase is also described as tetrameric consisting of two alpha and two beta subunits. Some archeal aspartokinases in this group lack recognizable ACT domains. Pssm-ID: 239779 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 239 Bit Score: 44.41 E-value: 1.16e-05
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PRK08210 | PRK08210 | aspartate kinase I; Reviewed |
118-187 | 2.47e-05 | ||||
aspartate kinase I; Reviewed Pssm-ID: 236188 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 403 Bit Score: 43.69 E-value: 2.47e-05
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asp_kinases | TIGR00657 | aspartate kinase; Aspartate kinase catalyzes a first step in the biosynthesis from Asp of Lys ... |
121-189 | 2.74e-05 | ||||
aspartate kinase; Aspartate kinase catalyzes a first step in the biosynthesis from Asp of Lys (and its precursor diaminopimelate), Met, and Thr. In E. coli, a distinct isozyme is inhibited by each of the three amino acid products. The Met-sensitive (I) and Thr-sensitive (II) forms are bifunctional enzymes fused to homoserine dehydrogenases and form homotetramers, while the Lys-sensitive form (III) is a monofunctional homodimer.The Lys-sensitive enzyme of Bacillus subtilis resembles the E. coli form but is an alpha 2/beta 2 heterotetramer, where the beta subunit is translated from an in-phase alternative initiator at Met-246. This may be a feature of a number of closely related forms, including a paralog from B. subtilis. [Amino acid biosynthesis, Aspartate family] Pssm-ID: 273201 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 441 Bit Score: 43.88 E-value: 2.74e-05
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AAK_AKi-DapG-BS | cd04260 | AAK_AKi-DapG-BS: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AKi-DapG; this CD includes the ... |
110-189 | 4.25e-05 | ||||
AAK_AKi-DapG-BS: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AKi-DapG; this CD includes the N-terminal catalytic aspartokinase (AK) domain of the diaminopimelate-sensitive aspartokinase isoenzyme AKI (DapG), a monofunctional class enzyme found in Bacilli (Bacillus subtilis 168), Clostridia, and Actinobacteria bacterial species. In Bacillus subtilis, the regulation of the diaminopimelate-lysine biosynthetic pathway involves dual control by diaminopimelate and lysine, effected through separate diaminopimelate- and lysine-sensitive aspartokinase isoenzymes. AKI activity is invariant during the exponential and stationary phases of growth and is not altered by addition of amino acids to the growth medium. The role of this isoenzyme is most likely to provide a constant level of aspartyl-beta-phosphate for the biosynthesis of diaminopimelate for peptidoglycan synthesis and dipicolinate during sporulation. The B. subtilis AKI is tetrameric consisting of two alpha and two beta subunits; the alpha (43 kD) and beta (17 kD) subunit formed by two in-phase overlapping genes. The alpha subunit contains the AK catalytic domain and two ACT domains. The beta subunit contains two ACT domains. Pssm-ID: 239793 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 244 Bit Score: 42.76 E-value: 4.25e-05
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PRK06291 | PRK06291 | aspartate kinase; Provisional |
129-189 | 1.45e-04 | ||||
aspartate kinase; Provisional Pssm-ID: 235773 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 465 Bit Score: 41.45 E-value: 1.45e-04
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thrA | PRK09436 | bifunctional aspartokinase I/homoserine dehydrogenase I; Provisional |
143-189 | 1.54e-04 | ||||
bifunctional aspartokinase I/homoserine dehydrogenase I; Provisional Pssm-ID: 181856 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 819 Bit Score: 41.68 E-value: 1.54e-04
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AAK_AKii-LysC-BS | cd04261 | AAK_AKii-LysC-BS: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AKii; this CD includes the N-terminal ... |
118-189 | 1.97e-04 | ||||
AAK_AKii-LysC-BS: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AKii; this CD includes the N-terminal catalytic aspartokinase (AK) domain of the lysine-sensitive aspartokinase isoenzyme AKII of Bacillus subtilis 168, and the lysine plus threonine-sensitive aspartokinase of Corynebacterium glutamicum, and related sequences. In B. subtilis 168, the regulation of the diaminopimelate (Dap)-lysine biosynthetic pathway involves dual control by Dap and lysine, effected through separate Dap- and lysine-sensitive aspartokinase isoenzymes. The B. subtilis 168 AKII is induced by methionine, and repressed and inhibited by lysine. Although Corynebacterium glutamicum is known to contain a single aspartokinase isoenzyme type, both the succinylase and dehydrogenase variant pathways of DAP-lysine synthesis operate simultaneously in this organism. In this organism and other various Gram-positive bacteria, the DAP-lysine pathway is feedback regulated by the concerted action of lysine and theronine. Also included in this CD are the aspartokinases of the extreme thermophile, Thermus thermophilus HB27, the Gram-negative obligate methylotroph, Methylophilus methylotrophus AS1, and those single aspartokinases found in Pseudomons, C. glutamicum, and Amycolatopsis lactamdurans. B. subtilis 168 AKII, and the C. glutamicum, Streptomyces clavuligerus and A. lactamdurans aspartokinases are described as tetramers consisting of two alpha and two beta subunits; the alpha (44 kD) and beta (18 kD) subunits formed by two in-phase overlapping polypeptides. Pssm-ID: 239794 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 239 Bit Score: 40.59 E-value: 1.97e-04
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IPPK_Arch | NF040647 | isopentenyl phosphate kinase; |
153-189 | 2.80e-04 | ||||
isopentenyl phosphate kinase; Pssm-ID: 468614 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 258 Bit Score: 40.28 E-value: 2.80e-04
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AAK_AK-HSDH | cd04257 | AAK_AK-HSDH: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AK-HSDH; this CD includes the N-terminal ... |
143-184 | 3.65e-04 | ||||
AAK_AK-HSDH: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AK-HSDH; this CD includes the N-terminal catalytic domain of aspartokinase (AK) of the bifunctional enzyme AK - homoserine dehydrogenase (HSDH). These aspartokinases are found in bacteria (E. coli AKI-HSDHI, ThrA and E. coli AKII-HSDHII, MetL) and higher plants (Z. mays AK-HSDH). AK and HSDH are the first and third enzymes in the biosynthetic pathway of the aspartate family of amino acids. AK catalyzes the phosphorylation of Asp to P-aspartyl phosphate. HSDH catalyzes the NADPH-dependent conversion of Asp 3-semialdehyde to homoserine. ThrA and MetL are involved in threonine and methionine biosynthesis, respectively. In E. coli, ThrA is subject to allosteric regulation by the end product L-threonine and the native enzyme is reported to be tetrameric. As with bacteria, plant AK and HSDH are feedback inhibited by pathway end products. Maize AK-HSDH is a Thr-sensitive 180-kD enzyme. Arabidopsis AK-HSDH is an alanine-activated, threonine-sensitive enzyme whose ACT domains, located C-terminal to the AK catalytic domain, were shown to be involved in allosteric activation. Pssm-ID: 239790 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 294 Bit Score: 40.26 E-value: 3.65e-04
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PRK06635 | PRK06635 | aspartate kinase; Reviewed |
143-189 | 5.79e-04 | ||||
aspartate kinase; Reviewed Pssm-ID: 235843 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 404 Bit Score: 39.71 E-value: 5.79e-04
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AAK_AK | cd04234 | AAK_AK: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), Aspartokinase (AK); this CD includes the ... |
84-189 | 7.94e-04 | ||||
AAK_AK: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), Aspartokinase (AK); this CD includes the N-terminal catalytic domain of aspartokinase (4-L-aspartate-4-phosphotransferase;). AK is the first enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway of the aspartate family of amino acids (lysine, threonine, methionine, and isoleucine) and the bacterial cell wall component, meso-diaminopimelate. It also catalyzes the conversion of aspartate and ATP to aspartylphosphate and ADP. One mechanism for the regulation of this pathway is by the production of several isoenzymes of aspartokinase with different repressors and allosteric inhibitors. Pairs of ACT domains are proposed to specifically bind amino acids leading to allosteric regulation of the enzyme. In Escherichia coli, three different aspartokinase isoenzymes are regulated specifically by lysine, methionine, and threonine. AK-HSDHI (ThrA) and AK-HSDHII (MetL) are bifunctional enzymes that consist of an N-terminal AK and a C-terminal homoserine dehydrogenase (HSDH). ThrA and MetL are involved in threonine and methionine biosynthesis, respectively. The third isoenzyme, AKIII (LysC), is monofunctional and is involved in lysine synthesis. The three Bacillus subtilis isoenzymes, AKI (DapG), AKII (LysC), and AKIII (YclM), are feedback-inhibited by meso-diaminopimelate, lysine, and lysine plus threonine, respectively. The E. coli lysine-sensitive AK is described as a homodimer, whereas, the B. subtilis lysine-sensitive AK is described as a heterodimeric complex of alpha- and beta- subunits that are formed from two in-frame overlapping genes. A single AK enzyme type has been described in Pseudomonas, Amycolatopsis, and Corynebacterium. The fungal aspartate pathway is regulated at the AK step, with L-Thr being an allosteric inhibitor of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae AK (Hom3). At least two distinct AK isoenzymes can occur in higher plants, one is a monofunctional lysine-sensitive isoenzyme, which is involved in the overall regulation of the pathway and can be synergistically inhibited by S-adenosylmethionine. The other isoenzyme is a bifunctional, threonine-sensitive AK-HSDH protein. Also included in this CD is the catalytic domain of the Methylomicrobium alcaliphilum ectoine AK, the first enzyme of the ectoine biosynthetic pathway, found in this bacterium, and several other halophilic/halotolerant bacteria. Pssm-ID: 239767 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 227 Bit Score: 38.99 E-value: 7.94e-04
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MetL1 | COG0527 | Aspartate kinase [Amino acid transport and metabolism]; Aspartate kinase is part of the ... |
119-189 | 1.75e-03 | ||||
Aspartate kinase [Amino acid transport and metabolism]; Aspartate kinase is part of the Pathway/BioSystem: Lysine biosynthesis Pssm-ID: 440293 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 407 Bit Score: 38.14 E-value: 1.75e-03
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AAK_AK-HSDH-like | cd04243 | AAK_AK-HSDH-like: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AK-HSDH-like; this family includes the ... |
143-184 | 1.94e-03 | ||||
AAK_AK-HSDH-like: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AK-HSDH-like; this family includes the N-terminal catalytic domain of aspartokinase (AK) of the bifunctional enzyme AK- homoserine dehydrogenase (HSDH). These aspartokinases are found in such bacteria as E. coli (AKI-HSDHI, ThrA and AKII-HSDHII, MetL) and in higher plants (Z. mays AK-HSDH). AK and HSDH are the first and third enzymes in the biosynthetic pathway of the aspartate family of amino acids. AK catalyzes the phosphorylation of Asp to P-aspartyl phosphate. HSDH catalyzes the NADPH-dependent conversion of Asp 3-semialdehyde to homoserine. ThrA and MetL are involved in threonine and methionine biosynthesis, respectively. In E. coli, ThrA is subject to allosteric regulation by the end product L-threonine and the native enzyme is reported to be tetrameric. As with bacteria, plant AK and HSDH are feedback inhibited by pathway end products. Maize AK-HSDH is a Thr-sensitive 180-kD enzyme. Arabidopsis AK-HSDH is an alanine-activated, threonine-sensitive enzyme whose ACT domains, located C-terminal to the AK catalytic domain, were shown to be involved in allosteric activation. Also included in this CD is the catalytic domain of the aspartokinase (AK) of the lysine-sensitive aspartokinase isoenzyme AKIII, a monofunctional class enzyme (LysC) found in some bacteria such as E. coli. In E. coli, LysC is reported to be a homodimer of 50 kD subunits. Also included in this CD is the catalytic domain of aspartokinase (AK) of the bifunctional enzyme AK - DAP decarboxylase (DapDC) found in some bacteria. DapDC, which is the lysA gene product, catalyzes the decarboxylation of DAP to lysine. Pssm-ID: 239776 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 293 Bit Score: 37.92 E-value: 1.94e-03
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ProB | COG0263 | Glutamate 5-kinase [Amino acid transport and metabolism]; Glutamate 5-kinase is part of the ... |
151-195 | 4.66e-03 | ||||
Glutamate 5-kinase [Amino acid transport and metabolism]; Glutamate 5-kinase is part of the Pathway/BioSystem: Proline biosynthesis Pssm-ID: 440033 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 371 Bit Score: 36.94 E-value: 4.66e-03
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AAK_UMPK-MosAB | cd04255 | AAK_UMPK-MosAB: This CD includes the alpha and beta subunits of the Mo storage protein (MosA ... |
136-192 | 5.20e-03 | ||||
AAK_UMPK-MosAB: This CD includes the alpha and beta subunits of the Mo storage protein (MosA and MosB) which are related to uridine monophosphate kinase (UMPK) enzymes that catalyze the phosphorylation of UMP by ATP, yielding UDP, and playing a key role in pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis. The Mo storage protein from the nitrogen-fixing bacterium, Azotobacter vinelandii, is characterized as an alpha4-beta4 octamer containing a polynuclear molybdenum-oxide cluster which is ATP-dependent to bind Mo and pH-dependent to release Mo. These and related bacterial sequences in this CD are members of the Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK). Pssm-ID: 239788 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 262 Bit Score: 36.60 E-value: 5.20e-03
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AAK_G5K_ProB | cd04242 | AAK_G5K_ProB: Glutamate-5-kinase (G5K) catalyzes glutamate-dependent ATP cleavage; G5K ... |
150-180 | 7.42e-03 | ||||
AAK_G5K_ProB: Glutamate-5-kinase (G5K) catalyzes glutamate-dependent ATP cleavage; G5K transfers the terminal phosphoryl group of ATP to the gamma-carboxyl group of glutamate, in the first and controlling step of proline (and, in mammals, ornithine) biosynthesis. G5K is subject to feedback allosteric inhibition by proline or ornithine. In microorganisms and plants, proline plays an important role as an osmoprotectant and, in mammals, ornithine biosynthesis is crucial for proper ammonia detoxification, since a G5K mutation has been shown to cause human hyperammonaemia. Microbial G5K generally consists of two domains: a catalytic G5K domain and one PUA (pseudo uridine synthases and archaeosine-specific transglycosylases) domain, and some lack the PUA domain. G5K requires free Mg for activity, it is tetrameric, and it aggregates to higher forms in a proline-dependent way. G5K lacking the PUA domain remains tetrameric, active, and proline-inhibitable, but the Mg requirement and the proline-triggered aggregation are greatly diminished and abolished, respectively, and more proline is needed for inhibition. Although plant and animal G5Ks are part of a bifunctional polypeptide, delta 1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthetase (P5CS), composed of an N-terminal G5K (ProB) and a C-terminal glutamyl 5- phosphate reductase (G5PR; ProA); bacterial and yeast G5Ks are monofunctional single-polypeptide enzymes. In this CD, all three domain architectures are present: G5K, G5K+PUA, and G5K+G5PR. Pssm-ID: 239775 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 251 Bit Score: 36.27 E-value: 7.42e-03
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AAK_AK-LysC-like | cd04244 | AAK_AK-LysC-like: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AK-LysC-like; this CD includes the ... |
140-189 | 7.67e-03 | ||||
AAK_AK-LysC-like: Amino Acid Kinase Superfamily (AAK), AK-LysC-like; this CD includes the N-terminal catalytic aspartokinase (AK) domain of the lysine-sensitive AK isoenzyme found in higher plants. The lysine-sensitive AK isoenzyme is a monofunctional protein. It is involved in the overall regulation of the aspartate pathway and can be synergistically inhibited by S-adenosylmethionine. Also included in this CD is an uncharacterized LysC-like AK found in Euryarchaeota and some bacteria. AK catalyzes the conversion of aspartate and ATP to aspartylphosphate and ADP. Pssm-ID: 239777 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 298 Bit Score: 36.20 E-value: 7.67e-03
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