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EC 2.7.7.108 Details
EC number
2.7.7.108
Accepted name
protein adenylyltransferase
Reaction
(1) ATP + a [protein]-L-serine = diphosphate + a [protein]-O-(5′-adenylyl)-L-serine;;(1) ATP + a [protein]-L-threonine = diphosphate + a [protein]-O-(5′-adenylyl)-L-threonine;;(1) ATP + a [protein]-L-tyrosine = diphosphate + a [protein]-O-(5′-adenylyl)-L-tyrosine
Other name(s)
AMPylase, selO (gene name), FMP40 (gene name), SELENOO (gene name), IbpA, VopS, DrrA, FICD (gene name)
Systematic name
[protein] L-serine/L-threonine/L-tyrosine adenylyltransferase
Comment
The enzyme, commonly referred to as AMPylase, transfers an adenylyl (adenosine 5′-phosphate) group from ATP to L-serine, L-threonine, and L-tyrosine residues in its target protein substrates. AMPylation is found in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. In bacteria AMPylases are abundant enzymes that either regulate the function of endogenous bacterial proteins or are translocated into host cells to hijack host cell signalling processes. Metazoans AMPylases are either enzymes containing a conserved Fic domain that primarily modify the ER-resident chaperone BiP, or mitochondrial selenocysteine-containing proteins (SelO) involved in redox signalling.
History
created 2022
EC Tree
2.7.7.16 created 1961, deleted 1972, [transferred to EC 3.1.4.22, deleted 1980]
2.7.7.17 created 1965, deleted 1972, [transferred to EC 3.1.4.23, deleted 1980]
2.7.7.20 created 1965, deleted 1972
2.7.7.26 created 1961 as EC 3.1.4.8, transferred 1965 to EC 2.7.7.26, deleted 1972
2.7.7.29 created 1972, deleted 2004