Genome Biology Volume 2 Issue 1 |
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ReviewThe nitrilase superfamily: classification, structure and functionHelen C Pace and Charles Brenner  Structural Biology and Bioinformatics Program, Kimmel Cancer Center, 233 S Tenth Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA author email corresponding author email
Genome Biology 2001,
2:reviews0001.1-0001.9doi:10.1186/gb-2001-2-1-reviews0001
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15 January 2001 |
Subject areas: Biochemistry and structural biology Abstract
The nitrilase superfamily consists of thiol enzymes involved in natural product biosynthesis and post-translational modification in plants, animals, fungi and certain prokaryotes. On the basis of sequence similarity and the presence of additional domains, the superfamily can be classified into 13 branches, nine of which have known or deduced specificity for specific nitrile- or amide-hydrolysis or amide-condensation reactions. Genetic and biochemical analysis of the family members and their associated domains assists in predicting the localization, specificity and cell biology of hundreds of uncharacterized protein sequences. |