Protein Domain : Pyruvate kinase-like, insert domain superfamily IPR011037

Type  Homologous_superfamily
Description  Pyruvate kinase ( ) (PK) catalyses the final step in glycolysis [ , ], the conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate with concomitant phosphorylation of ADP to ATP:ADP + phosphoenolpyruvate = ATP + pyruvate The enzyme, which is found in all living organisms, requires both magnesium and potassium ions for its activity. In vertebrates, there are four tissue-specific isozymes: L (liver), R (red cells), M1 (muscle, heart and brain), and M2 (early foetal tissue). In plants, PK exists as cytoplasmic and plastid isozymes, while most bacteria and lower eukaryotes have one form, except in certain bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, that have two isozymes. All isozymes appear to be tetramers of identical subunits of ~500 residues.PK helps control the rate of glycolysis, along with phosphofructokinase ( ) and hexokinase ( ). PK possesses allosteric sites for numerous effectors, yet the isozymes respond differently, in keeping with their different tissue distributions [ ]. The activity of L-type (liver) PK is increased by fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (F1,6BP) and lowered by ATP and alanine (gluconeogenic precursor), therefore when glucose levels are high, glycolysis is promoted, and when levels are low, gluconeogenesis is promoted. L-type PK is also hormonally regulated, being activated by insulin and inhibited by glucagon, which covalently modifies the PK enzyme. M1-type (muscle, brain) PK is inhibited by ATP, but F1,6BP and alanine have no effect, which correlates with the function of muscle and brain, as opposed to the liver.The structure of several pyruvate kinases from various organisms have been determined [ , , ]. The protein comprises three-four domains: a small N-terminal helical domain (absent in bacterial PK), a β/α-barrel domain, a β-barrel domain (inserted within the β/α-barrel domain), and a 3-layer α/β/α sandwich domain.This superfamily represents the β-barrel domain (note: it does not include the beta/α-barrel it is inserted into). This domain has a similar topology to the β-strand-rich C-terminal domain of molybdenum cofactor (MOCO) sulphurase (MOSC domain). MOSC domains are found alone in bacterial YiiM proteins, or fused to other domains, such as a NifS-like catalytic domain in MOCO sulphurase. The MOSC domain is predicted to be a sulphur-carrier domain that receives sulphur abstracted from pyridoxal phosphate-dependent NifS-like enzymes, using it for the formation of diverse sulphur-metal clusters [ ].
Short Name  Pyrv_Knase-like_insert_dom_sf

0 Child Features

2 Gene Families

1000 Genes

0 Ontology Annotations

0 Parent Features

14 Publications

USDA
InterMine logo
The Legume Information System (LIS) is a research project of the USDA-ARS:Corn Insects and Crop Genetics Research in Ames, IA.
LegumeMine || ArachisMine | CicerMine | GlycineMine | LensMine | LupinusMine | PhaseolusMine | VignaMine | MedicagoMine
InterMine © 2002 - 2022 Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EH, United Kingdom