Phosphatase Subfamily CDC25

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Phosphatase Classification: Fold CC3 (Rhondanese): Superfamily CC3 (Rhondanese): Family CDC25: Subfamily CDC25


Evolution

CDC25 subfamily is found in a broad of eukaryotes, but absent from most if not all of plants. It has multiple copies in some if not many genomes. For example, human, fruit fly and C elegans have 3, 2, 4, respectively, and they do not fall into 1:1 orthologous relationship.

Domain

Human CDC25s have N-terminal regulatory domain and phosphatase domain. Due to alternative splicing, the isoforms of human CDC25s have different sequences at regulatory domain region.

Catalytic activity and functions

Cdc25 phosphatases, as activators of the Cdk/cyclins, play critical roles in the regulation of the eukaryotic cell cycle. Their structures and functions have been reviewed in details [1, 2, 3].

References

  1. Boutros R, Dozier C, and Ducommun B. The when and wheres of CDC25 phosphatases. Curr Opin Cell Biol. 2006 Apr;18(2):185-91. DOI:10.1016/j.ceb.2006.02.003 | PubMed ID:16488126 | HubMed [boutros06]
  2. Rudolph J. Cdc25 phosphatases: structure, specificity, and mechanism. Biochemistry. 2007 Mar 27;46(12):3595-604. DOI:10.1021/bi700026j | PubMed ID:17328562 | HubMed [rudolph07]
  3. Boutros R, Lobjois V, and Ducommun B. CDC25 phosphatases in cancer cells: key players? Good targets?. Nat Rev Cancer. 2007 Jul;7(7):495-507. DOI:10.1038/nrc2169 | PubMed ID:17568790 | HubMed [boutros07]
All Medline abstracts: PubMed | HubMed