Difference between revisions of "Phosphatase Family OCA"

From PhosphataseWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Phosphatase classification|Phosphatase Classification]]: [[Phosphatase_Superfamily_CC1|Superfamily CC1]]:  [[Phosphatase_Family_OCA|OCA]]
+
[[Phosphatase classification|Phosphatase Classification]]: [[Phosphatase_Fold_CC1|Fold CC1]]: [[Phosphatase_Superfamily_CC1|Superfamily CC1]]:  [[Phosphatase_Family_OCA|OCA]]
  
The OCA family is named after the five member genes in yeast (OCA1-5 = Oxidant-induced Cell-cycle Arrest). Yeast OCA members are involved in cell cycle arrest in response to oxidative damage<cite>Alic</cite>, in telomere capping <cite>lydall08</cite>, in actin organization <cite>Care</cite>. [[Gene_OCA3|OCA3]] has been shown to control intracellular localization of Gln3 (a phosphorylated transcriptional activator), in cooperation with Npr1 kinase <cite>Harashima08</cite>.
+
The OCA family is named after the five member genes in yeast (OCA1-5 = Oxidant-induced Cell-cycle Arrest). The family is also called plant and fungi atypical (PFA)-DSPs <cite>Pulido07 Pulido11</cite>.  
  
 +
=== Evolution ===
 
OCA is found in most eukaryotes other than eumetazoa. We have seen it in fungi, plants, protists, monosiga, and sponge.
 
OCA is found in most eukaryotes other than eumetazoa. We have seen it in fungi, plants, protists, monosiga, and sponge.
  
The family is also called '''plant and fungi atypical (PFA)-DSPs''' <cite>Pulido07 Pulido11</cite>.
+
=== Domain ===
 +
OCA has a single domain, a phosphatase domain of fold CC1.
  
 +
=== Functions ===
 +
Yeast OCA members are involved in cell cycle arrest in response to oxidative damage<cite>Alic</cite>, in telomere capping <cite>lydall08</cite>, in actin organization <cite>Care</cite>. [[Gene_OCA3|OCA3]] has been shown to control intracellular localization of Gln3 (a phosphorylated transcriptional activator), in cooperation with Npr1 kinase <cite>Harashima08</cite>.
  
===== Reference =====
+
===== References =====
 
<biblio>
 
<biblio>
 
#Alic pmid=11408586
 
#Alic pmid=11408586

Revision as of 23:55, 26 February 2015

Phosphatase Classification: Fold CC1: Superfamily CC1: OCA

The OCA family is named after the five member genes in yeast (OCA1-5 = Oxidant-induced Cell-cycle Arrest). The family is also called plant and fungi atypical (PFA)-DSPs [1, 2].

Evolution

OCA is found in most eukaryotes other than eumetazoa. We have seen it in fungi, plants, protists, monosiga, and sponge.

Domain

OCA has a single domain, a phosphatase domain of fold CC1.

Functions

Yeast OCA members are involved in cell cycle arrest in response to oxidative damage[3], in telomere capping [4], in actin organization [5]. OCA3 has been shown to control intracellular localization of Gln3 (a phosphorylated transcriptional activator), in cooperation with Npr1 kinase [6].

References
Error fetching PMID 11408586:
Error fetching PMID 15020461:
Error fetching PMID 17976645:
Error fetching PMID 21409566:
Error fetching PMID 18845848:
Error fetching PMID 18166280:
  1. Error fetching PMID 17976645: [Pulido07]
  2. Error fetching PMID 21409566: [Pulido11]
  3. Error fetching PMID 11408586: [Alic]
  4. Error fetching PMID 18845848: [lydall08]
  5. Error fetching PMID 15020461: [Care]
  6. Error fetching PMID 18166280: [Harashima08]
All Medline abstracts: PubMed | HubMed