Phosphatase Superfamily AP

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Phosphatase Classification: Fold AP: Superfamily AP (Alkaline phosphatase)

Evolution

Alkaline phosphatases are found in metazoa, fungi, some protists, and bacteria, but are absent from most plants. They belong to the alkaline phosphatase-like fold (SCOP), which contains other enzymes, such as phosphoesterases and sulfatases.

Functions

Alkaline phosphatases are a superfamily (Pfam) with a wide variety of substrates, possibly including phosphoproteins. There are four human alkaline phosphatases, named by their tissue expression: ALPI (alkaline phosphatase, intestinal), ALPP (alkaline phosphatase, placental), ALPPL2 (alkaline phosphatase, placental-like 2), and ALPL (alkaline phosphatase, liver/bone/kidneytissue). Early reports found that ALPL and ALPI can dephosphorylate Histone H2A [1, 2] and that PLAP is a protein tyrosine phosphatase [3], but their physiological relevance as protein phosphatases is still unclear.

Family

It has a single family AP and subfamily AP.

References

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Error fetching PMID 8396040:
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  1. Error fetching PMID 6167574: [Swarup]
  2. Error fetching PMID 3011792: [Chan]
  3. Error fetching PMID 8396040: [Telfer]
All Medline abstracts: PubMed | HubMed