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Enolase-phosphatase similar to human enolase-phosphatase E1 and and Xanthomonas oryzae pv. Oryzae enolase-phosphatase Xep Enolase-phosphatase E1 (also called MASA) is a bifunctional enolase- phosphatase which promotes the conversion of 2,3-diketo-5-methylthio-1-phosphopentane to 1,2-dihydroxy-3-keto-5-methylthiopentene anion (an aci-reductone) in the methionine salvage pathway. The catalytic reaction is carried out continuously by enolization and dephosphorylation, and the enolase activity cannot be classified as typical enzymatic enolization. This family belongs to the haloacid dehalogenase-like (HAD) hydrolases, a large superfamily of diverse enzymes that catalyze carbon or phosphoryl group transfer reactions on a range of substrates, using an active site aspartate in nucleophilic catalysis. Members of this superfamily include 2-L-haloalkanoic acid dehalogenase, azetidine hydrolase, phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase, phosphoserine phosphatase, phosphomannomutase, P-type ATPases and many others. HAD hydrolases are found in all three kingdoms of life, and most genomes are predicted to contain multiple HAD-like proteins. Members possess a highly conserved alpha/beta core domain, and many also possess a small cap domain, the fold and function of which is variable. HAD hydrolases are sometimes referred to as belonging to the DDDD superfamily of phosphohydrolases.
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