Farnesyl diphosphate synthase; regulation of product specificity.

Article Details

Citation

Szkopinska A, Plochocka D

Farnesyl diphosphate synthase; regulation of product specificity.

Acta Biochim Pol. 2005;52(1):45-55.

PubMed ID
15827605 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Farnesyl diphosphate synthase (FPPS) is a key enzyme in isoprenoid biosynthesis which supplies sesquiterpene precursors for several classes of essential metabolites including sterols, dolichols, ubiquinones and carotenoids as well as substrates for farnesylation and geranylgeranylation of proteins. It catalyzes the sequential head-to-tail condensation of two molecules of isopentenyl diphosphate with dimethylallyl diphosphate. The enzyme is a homodimer of subunits, typically having two aspartate-rich motifs with two sets of substrate binding sites for an allylic diphosphate and isopentenyl diphosphate per homodimer. The synthase amino-acid residues at the 4th and 5th positions before the first aspartate rich motif mainly determine product specificity. Hypothetically, type I (eukaryotic) and type II (eubacterial) FPPSs evolved from archeal geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase by substitutions in the chain length determination region. FPPS belongs to enzymes encoded by gene families. In plants this offers the possibility of differential regulation in response to environmental changes or to herbivore or pathogen attack.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Farnesyl pyrophosphate synthaseP14324Details