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TENA/THI-4/PQQC family
Members of this family are found in all the three major phyla of life: archaebacteria, eubacteria, and eukaryotes. In Bacillus subtilis, TENA is one of a number of proteins that enhance the expression of extracellular enzymes, such as alkaline protease, neutral protease and levansucrase [1]. The THI-4 protein, which is involved in thiamine biosynthesis, is also a member of this family. The C-terminal part of these proteins consistently show significant sequence similarity to TENA proteins. This similarity was first noted with the Neurospora crassa THI-4 [2]. This family includes bacterial coenzyme PQQ synthesis protein C or PQQC proteins. Pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) is the prosthetic group of several bacterial enzymes,including methanol dehydrogenase of methylotrophs and the glucose dehydrogenase of a number of bacteria [3]. PQQC has been found to be required in the synthesis of PQQ but its function is unclear. The exact molecular function of members of this family is uncertain. [1]. 1898926. Cloning and characterization of a pair of novel genes that. regulate production of extracellular enzymes in Bacillus. subtilis.. Pang AS, Nathoo S, Wong SL;. J Bacteriol 1991;173:46-54.. [2]. 8662211. Molecular cloning of thi-4, a gene necessary for the. biosynthesis of thiamine in Neurospora crassa.. Akiyama M, Nakashima H;. Curr Genet 1996;30:62-67.. [3]. 12437981. PqqC/D, which converts a biosynthetic intermediate to. pyrroloquinoline quinone.. Toyama H, Fukumoto H, Saeki M, Matsushita K, Adachi O, Lidstrom. ME;. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2002;299:268-272. (from Pfam)
TenA family protein
TenA family protein such as Bacillus halodurans aminopyrimidine aminohydrolase, which catalyzes an amino-pyrimidine hydrolysis reaction at the C5' of the pyrimidine moiety of thiamine compounds, as part of the thiamine salvage pathway
thiaminase II
The TenA protein of Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aurues, and the C-terminal region of trifunctional protein Thi20p from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, perform cleavages on thiamine and related compounds to produce 4-amino-5-hydroxymethyl-2-methylpyrimidine (HMP), a substrate a salvage pathway for thiamine biosynthesis. The gene symbol tenA, for Transcription ENhancement A, reflects a misleading early characterization as a regulatory protein. This family is related to PqqC from the PQQ biosynthesis system (see TIGR02111), heme oxygenase (PF01126), and CADD (Chlamydia protein Associating with Death Domains), a putative folate metabolism enzyme (see TIGR04305).
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