HMM Summary Page: TIGR01549

AccessionTIGR01549
NameHAD-SF-IA-v1
FunctionHAD hydrolase, family IA, variant 1
Trusted Cutoff23.30
Domain Trusted Cutoff23.30
Noise Cutoff22.70
Domain Noise Cutoff22.70
Isology Typesubfamily
HMM Length149
Mainrole CategoryUnknown function
Subrole CategoryEnzymes of unknown specificity
Gene Ontology TermGO:0008152: metabolic process biological_process
GO:0016787: hydrolase activity molecular_function
AuthorSelengut J
Entry DateJun 12 2002 2:21PM
Last ModifiedFeb 14 2011 3:27PM
CommentThis HMM represents part of one structural subfamily of the Haloacid Dehalogenase (HAD) superfamily of aspartate-nucleophile hydrolases. The superfamily is defined by the presence of three short catalytic motifs [1]. The subfamilies are defined [2] based on the location and the observed or predicted fold of a so-called "capping domain" [3], or the absence of such a domain. Subfamily I consists of sequences in which the capping domain is found in between the first and second catalytic motifs. Subfamily II consists of sequences in which the capping domain is found between the second and third motifs. Subfamily III sequences have no capping domain in either of these positions. The Subfamily IA and IB capping domains are predicted by PSI-PRED to consist of an alpha helical bundle. Subfamily I encompasses such a wide region of sequence space (the sequences are highly divergent) that modelling it with a single HMM is impossible, resulting in an overly broad description which allows in many unrelated sequences. Subfamily IA and IB are separated based on an aparrent phylogenetic bifurcation. Subfamily IA is still too broad to model, but cannot be further subdivided into large chunks based on phylogenetic trees. Of the three motifs defining the HAD superfamily, the third has three variant forms [2]: (1) hhhhsDxxx(x)(D/E), (2) hhhhssxxx(x)D and (3) hhhhDDxxx(x)s where _s_ refers to a small amino acid and _h_ to a hydrophobic one. All three of these variants are found in subfamily IA. Individual HMMs were made based on seeds exhibiting only one of the variants each. Variant 1 (this model) is found in the enzymes phosphoglycolate phosphatase (TIGR01449) and enolase-phosphatase. These three variant models (see also TIGR01493 and TIGR01509) were created with the knowledge that there will be overlap among them - this is by design and serves the purpose of eliminating the overlap with models of more distantly related HAD subfamilies caused by an overly broad single model.
ReferencesRN [1] RM PMID: 7966317 RT Computer analysis of bacterial haloacid dehalogenases defines a large superfamily of hydrolases with diverse specificity. Application of an iterative approach to database search. RA Koonin EV, Tatusov RL. RL J Mol Biol 1994 Nov 18;244(1):125-32 RN [2] RM PMID: 11601995 RT MDP-1 is a new and distinct member of the haloacid dehalogenase family of aspartate-dependent phosphohydrolases. RA Selengut, JD RL Biochemistry 2001 Oct 23;40(42):12704-11 RN [3] RM PMID: 10956028 RT The crystal structure of bacillus cereus phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase: insight into catalysis of phosphorus bond cleavage and catalytic diversification wi thin the HAD enzyme superfamily. RA Morais MC, Zhang W, Baker AS, Zhang G, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN. RL Biochemistry 2000 Aug 29;39(34):10385-96 DR HAMAP; MF_01681; 46 of 89