Title : The structure and function of platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolases - Derewenda_1998_Cell.Mol.Life.Sci_54_446 |
Author(s) : Derewenda ZS , Derewenda U |
Ref : Cell Mol Life Sciences , 54 :446 , 1998 |
Abstract :
Platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolases (PAF-AHs, EC 3.1.1.47) constitute a unique and biologically important family of phospholipase A2s. They are related to neither the well-characterized secretory nor cytosolic PLA2s, and unlike them do not require Ca2+ for catalytic activity. The distinguishing property of PAF-AHs is their unique substrate specificity: they act on the phospholipid platelet-activating factor (PAF), and in some cases on proinflammatory polar phospholipids, from which they remove a short acyl moiety--acetyl in the case of PAF--located at the sn-2 position. Because PAF is found both in the plasma and in the cytosol of many tissues, PAF-acetylhydrolases are equally widely distributed in an animal organism. Recent crystallographic studies shed new light on the complex structure-function relationships in PAF-AHs. |
PubMedSearch : Derewenda_1998_Cell.Mol.Life.Sci_54_446 |
PubMedID: 9645224 |
Family | PAF_acetylhydro-like |
Derewenda ZS, Derewenda U (1998)
The structure and function of platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolases
Cell Mol Life Sciences
54 :446
Derewenda ZS, Derewenda U (1998)
Cell Mol Life Sciences
54 :446