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Browse result for Absence in Dephosphorylation
※ introduction In biochemistry, dephosphorylation is the removal of a phosphate (PO43?) group from an organic compound by hydrolysis. It is a reversible post-translational modification. Dephosphorylation and its counterpart, phosphorylation, activate and deactivate enzymes by detaching or attaching phosphoric esters and anhydrides. A notable occurrence of dephosphorylation is the conversion of ATP to ADP and inorganic phosphate. Dephosphorylation employs a type of hydrolytic enzyme, or hydrolase, which cleaves ester bonds. The prominent hydrolase subclass used in dephosphorylation is phosphatase, which removes phosphate groups by hydrolysing phosphoric acid monoesters into a phosphate ion and a molecule with a free hydroxyl (-OH) group. The reversible phosphorylation-dephosphorylation reaction occurs in every physiological process, making proper function of protein phosphatases necessary for organism viability. Because protein dephosphorylation is a key process involved in cell signalling, protein phosphatases are implicated in conditions such as cardiac disease, diabetes, and Alzheimer's disease.
Reference
Wiki: Dephosphorylation
Reference
Wiki: Dephosphorylation
| PTMD ID | UniProt Accession | Entrez ID | Gene Name | Protein Name | Organism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTMD00058 | P27361 | 5595 | MAPK3 | Mitogen-activated protein kinase 3 | Homo sapiens |
| PTMD00201 | P62753 | 6194 | RPS6 | Small ribosomal subunit protein eS6 | Homo sapiens |
| PTMD00912 | P55072 | 7415 | VCP | Transitional endoplasmic reticulum ATPase -ATPase p97 subunit) | Homo sapiens |
