Structure of Escherichia coli AMP nucleosidase reveals similarity to nucleoside phosphorylases.

Article Details

Citation

Zhang Y, Cottet SE, Ealick SE

Structure of Escherichia coli AMP nucleosidase reveals similarity to nucleoside phosphorylases.

Structure. 2004 Aug;12(8):1383-94.

PubMed ID
15296732 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

AMP nucleosidase (AMN) catalyzes the hydrolysis of AMP to form adenine and ribose 5-phosphate. The enzyme is found only in prokaryotes, where it plays a role in purine nucleoside salvage and intracellular AMP level regulation. Enzyme activity is stimulated by ATP and suppressed by phosphate. The structure of unliganded AMN was determined at 2.7 A resolution, and structures of the complexes with either formycin 5'-monophosphate or inorganic phosphate were determined at 2.6 A and 3.0 A resolution, respectively. AMN is a biological homohexamer, and each monomer is composed of two domains: a catalytic domain and a putative regulatory domain. The overall topology of the catalytic domain and some features of the substrate binding site resemble those of the nucleoside phosphorylases, demonstrating that AMN is a new member of the family. The structure of the regulatory domain consists of a long helix and a four-stranded sheet and has a novel topology.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
AMP nucleosidaseP0AE12Details