Rawlings_2019_Biochimie_166_4

Reference

Title : Origins of peptidases - Rawlings_2019_Biochimie_166_4
Author(s) : Rawlings ND , Bateman A
Ref : Biochimie , 166 :4 , 2019
Abstract :

The distribution of all peptidase homologues across all phyla of organisms was analysed to determine within which kingdom each of the 271 families originated. No family was found to be ubiquitous and even peptidases thought to be essential for life, such as signal peptidase and methionyl aminopeptides are missing from some clades. There are 33 peptidase families common to archaea, bacteria and eukaryotes and are assumed to have originated in the last universal common ancestor (LUCA). These include peptidases with different catalytic types, exo- and endopeptidases, peptidases with different tertiary structures and peptidases from different families but with similar structures. This implies that the different catalytic types and structures pre-date LUCA. Other families have had their origins in the ancestors of viruses, archaea, bacteria, fungi, plants and animals, and a number of families have had their origins in the ancestors of particular phyla. The evolution of peptidases is compared to recent hypotheses about the evolution of organisms.

PubMedSearch : Rawlings_2019_Biochimie_166_4
PubMedID: 31377195

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Citations formats

Rawlings ND, Bateman A (2019)
Origins of peptidases
Biochimie 166 :4

Rawlings ND, Bateman A (2019)
Biochimie 166 :4