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Difference between revisions of "Carbohydrate Esterase Family 1"

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== Three-dimensional structures ==
 
== Three-dimensional structures ==
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CE1's are members of the α/β-hydrolase superfamily <cite>Ronning2000</cite>, which are comprised of central β-strands connected by α-helices <cite>Ollis1992</cite>.
  
 
== Family Firsts ==
 
== Family Firsts ==
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<biblio>
 
<biblio>
 
#Lombard2014 pmid=24270786
 
#Lombard2014 pmid=24270786
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#Ronning2000 pmid=10655617
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#Ollis1992 pmid1409539
  
#Ronning2000 pmid=10655617
 
 
</biblio>
 
</biblio>
  
 
[[Category:Carbohydrate Esterase Families|CE001]]
 
[[Category:Carbohydrate Esterase Families|CE001]]

Revision as of 06:10, 1 February 2019

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This page is currently under construction. This means that the Responsible Curator has deemed that the page's content is not quite up to CAZypedia's standards for full public consumption. All information should be considered to be under revision and may be subject to major changes.


Carbohydrate Esterase Family 1
Clan GH-x
Mechanism retaining/inverting
Active site residues known/not known
CAZy DB link
http://www.cazy.org/CE1.html


Substrate specificities

Carbohydrate esterase family 1 (CE1) is one of the biggest and most diverse CE families including acetylxylan esterases (EC 3.1.1.72), feruloyl esterases (EC 3.1.1.73), cinnamoyl esterases (EC 3.1.1-), carboxylesterases (EC 3.1.1.1), S-formylglutathione hydrolases (EC 3.1.2.12), diacylglycerol O-acyltransferases (EC 2.3.1.20), and thehalose 6-O-mycolyltransferases (EC 2.3.1.122) and others [1].


Kinetics and Mechanism

Content is to be added here.

Catalytic Residues

Content is to be added here.

Three-dimensional structures

CE1's are members of the α/β-hydrolase superfamily [2], which are comprised of central β-strands connected by α-helices [3].

Family Firsts

First characterized
Content is to be added here.
First mechanistic insight
Content is to be added here.
First 3-D structure
Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv mycolyltransferase crystal structure in 2000 [2].

References

  1. Lombard V, Golaconda Ramulu H, Drula E, Coutinho PM, and Henrissat B. (2014). The carbohydrate-active enzymes database (CAZy) in 2013. Nucleic Acids Res. 2014;42(Database issue):D490-5. DOI:10.1093/nar/gkt1178 | PubMed ID:24270786 [Lombard2014]
  2. Ronning DR, Klabunde T, Besra GS, Vissa VD, Belisle JT, and Sacchettini JC. (2000). Crystal structure of the secreted form of antigen 85C reveals potential targets for mycobacterial drugs and vaccines. Nat Struct Biol. 2000;7(2):141-6. DOI:10.1038/72413 | PubMed ID:10655617 [Ronning2000]
  3. pmid1409539

    [Ollis1992]

All Medline abstracts: PubMed