| Literature DB >> 24312173 |
Abstract
Thermopsin is a peptidase from Sulfolobus acidocaldarius that is active at low pH and high temperature. From reversible inhibition with pepstatin, thermopsin is thought to be an aspartic peptidase. It is a member of the only family of peptidases to be restricted entirely to the archaea, namely peptidase family A5. Evolution within this family has been mapped, using a taxonomic tree based on the known classification of archaea. Homologues are found only in archaeans that are both hyperthermophiles and acidophiles, and this implies lateral transfer of genes between archaea, because species with homologues are not necessarily closely related. Despite the remarkable stability and activity in extreme conditions, no tertiary structure has been solved for any member of the family, and the catalytic mechanism is unknown. Putative catalytic residues have been predicted here by examination of aligned sequences.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24312173 PMCID: PMC3842238 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0078998
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Distribution of thermopsin homologues amongst archaea with completely sequenced genomes.
The phylogenetic tree is based on the classification from the NCBI Taxonomy database. Tips are annotated with coloured bricks as follows: yellow, completely sequenced genome; orange, hyperthermophilic; red, acidiophilic; black, presence of a thermopsin homologue. The number of black bricks indicates the number of thermopsin homologues.
Figure 2A Neighbour-joining tree for the thermopsin family A5.
The tree was generated from the alignment of peptidase domains using FastTree. Labels are species names and sequence identifiers from the MEROPS database. Classification is indicated by coloured dots: yellow = Sulfolobales; red = Euryarchaeota; dark blue = Nanoarchaeota; light blue = Thermoproteales; green = Fervicoccales. The probable root is indicated by a black dot.