Difference between revisions of "Accesory Domain Gains and Losses"

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* [[Phosphatase_Subfamily_ACP5|ACP5]]
 
* [[Phosphatase_Subfamily_ACP5|ACP5]]
 
* [[Phosphatase_Subfamily_CDC25|CDC25]]. Caenorhabditis lost the regulatory N-terminal domain ([[HMM_PD0128|CDC25_NTD]]). The insect CDC25s has a CDC25_NTD domain, but is quite divergent from other eumetazoa CDC25s.
 
* [[Phosphatase_Subfamily_CDC25|CDC25]]. Caenorhabditis lost the regulatory N-terminal domain ([[HMM_PD0128|CDC25_NTD]]). The insect CDC25s has a CDC25_NTD domain, but is quite divergent from other eumetazoa CDC25s.
* [[Phosphatase_Subfamiy_Tensin|Tensin]].
+
* [[Phosphatase_Subfamily_Tensin|Tensin]].

Latest revision as of 20:18, 10 October 2015

Below is the list of protein phosphatase subfamilies which has gained and/or lost accessory domains. The loss of a domain can be categorized into two types: 1) a complete loss of the domain which means no sequence at the region where the domain is supposed to be at; 2) the sequence is too divergent to be considered as the domain.

  • ACP5
  • CDC25. Caenorhabditis lost the regulatory N-terminal domain (CDC25_NTD). The insect CDC25s has a CDC25_NTD domain, but is quite divergent from other eumetazoa CDC25s.
  • Tensin.