Protein Domain : IPR019881

Type:  Family Name:  Diaminopimelate aminotransferase, DapL, Desulfovibrio-type
Description:  Two lysine biosynthesis pathways evolved separately in organisms, the diaminopimelic acid (DAP) and aminoadipic acid (AAA) pathways. The DAP pathway synthesizes L-lysine from aspartate and pyruvate, and diaminopimelic acid is an intermediate. This pathway is utilised by most bacteria, some archaea, some fungi, some algae, and plants. The AAA pathway synthesizes L-lysine from alpha-ketoglutarate and acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA), and alpha-aminoadipic acid is an intermediate. This pathway is utilised by most fungi, some algae, the bacterium Thermus thermophilus, and probably some archaea, such as Sulfolobus, Thermoproteus, and Pyrococcus. No organism is known to possess both pathways [].There four known variations of the DAP pathway in bacteria: the succinylase, acetylase, aminotransferase, and dehydrogenase pathways. These pathways share the steps converting L-aspartate to L-2,3,4,5- tetrahydrodipicolinate (THDPA), but the subsequent steps leading to the production of meso-diaminopimelate, the immediate precursor of L-lysine, are different [].The succinylase pathway acylates THDPA with succinyl-CoA to generate N-succinyl-LL-2-amino-6-ketopimelate and forms meso-DAP by subsequent transamination, desuccinylation, and epimerization. This pathway is utilised by proteobacteria and many firmicutes and actinobacteria. The acetylase pathway is analogous to the succinylase pathway but uses N-acetyl intermediates. This pathway is limited to certain Bacillus species, in which the corresponding genes have not been identified. The aminotransferase pathway converts THDPA directly to LL-DAP by diaminopimelate aminotransferase (DapL) without acylation. This pathway is shared by cyanobacteria, Chlamydia, the archaeon Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus, and the plant Arabidopsis thaliana. The dehydrogenase pathway forms meso-DAP directly from THDPA, NADPH, and NH4 _ by using diaminopimelate dehydrogenase (Ddh). This pathway is utilised by some Bacillus and Brevibacterium species and Corynebacterium glutamicum. Most bacteria use only one of the four variants, although certain bacteria, such as C. glutamicum and Bacillus macerans, possess both the succinylase and dehydrogenase pathways.This group of the superfamily of aminotransferases includes several which are adjacent to elements of the lysine biosynthesis via diaminopimelate pathway (). Every member of this group is from a genome which possesses most of the lysine biosynthesis pathway but lacks any of the known aminotransferases, succinylases, desuccinylases, acetylases or deacetylases typical of the acylated versions of this pathway nor do they have the direct, NADPH-dependent enzyme (ddh). Although there is no experimental characterisation of any of the sequences in this group, a direct pathway is known in plants and Chlamydia [, ] so it seems quite reasonable that these enzymes catalyse the same transformation. Short Name:  DAP-NH2Trfase_DapL_Desulfo

0 Child Features

3 Contains

DB identifier Type Name
IPR015421 Domain Pyridoxal phosphate-dependent transferase, major region, subdomain 1
IPR015422 Domain Pyridoxal phosphate-dependent transferase, major region, subdomain 2
IPR004838 Binding_site Aminotransferases, class-I, pyridoxal-phosphate-binding site

1 Cross References

Identifier
TIGR03540

0 Found In

2 GO Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0010285 IPR019881
GO:0009089 IPR019881

2 Ontology Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0010285 IPR019881
GO:0009089 IPR019881

0 Parent Features

0 Proteins

3 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            20418392
            17583737
            17093042