Title of article :
A Comparative Analysis of Three Classes of Bacterial Non-specific Acid Phosphatases and Archaeal Phosphoesterases: Evolutionary Perspective
Author/Authors :
Gandhi, Neha U. Roosevelt University - Department of Biological, Chemical and Physical Sciences, USA , Chandra, Sathees B. Roosevelt University - Department of Biological, Chemical and Physical Sciences, USA
From page :
167
To page :
173
Abstract :
Introduction: Bacterial nonspecific acid phosphohydrolases (NSAPs) or phosphatases are group of enzymes secreted as soluble periplasmic proteins or retained as membrane bound lipoproteins that are usually able to dephosphorylate a broad array of structurally unrelated organic phosphoesters (nucleotides, sugar phosphates, phytic acid etc.) to acquire inorganic phosphate (Pi) and organic byproducts. They exhibit optimal catalytic activity at acidic to neutral pH values. On the basis of amino acid sequence relatedness, phosphatase are grouped into different molecular families namely Class A, Class B and Class C acid phosphatase respectively. Results and discussion: In this article out of thirty three sequences, twenty six belonging to each of the three classes of bacterial acid phosphatase and seven belonging to archaeal phosphoesterases were analyzed using various tools of bioinformatics. Phylogenetic analysis, dot plot comparisons and motif analysis were done to identify a number of similarities and differences between three classes of bacterial acid phosphatases and archaeal phosphoesterases. In this research we have attempted to decipher evolutionary relationship between three classes of bacterial acid phosphatase and archaeal phosphoesterases using bioinformatics approach
Keywords :
Non , specific acid phosphatase , archaeal phosphoesterase , NSAP , evolution
Journal title :
Acta Informatica Medica
Journal title :
Acta Informatica Medica
Record number :
2568382
Link To Document :
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