2BSX
Crystal structure of the Plasmodium falciparum purine nucleoside phosphorylase complexed with inosine
External Resource: Annotation
Domain Annotation: SCOP/SCOPe Classification SCOP-e Database Homepage
Chains | Domain Info | Class | Fold | Superfamily | Family | Domain | Species | Provenance Source (Version) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | d2bsxa2 | Alpha and beta proteins (a/b) | Phosphorylase/hydrolase-like | Purine and uridine phosphorylases | Purine and uridine phosphorylases | automated matches | (Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 ) [TaxId: 36329 ], | SCOPe (2.08) |
A | d2bsxa3 | Artifacts | Tags | Tags | Tags | C-terminal Tags | (Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 ) [TaxId: 36329 ], | SCOPe (2.08) |
Domain Annotation: SCOP2 Classification SCOP2 Database Homepage
Domain Annotation: ECOD Classification ECOD Database Homepage
Domain Annotation: CATH CATH Database Homepage
Chain | Domain | Class | Architecture | Topology | Homology | Provenance Source (Version) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 3.40.50.1580 | Alpha Beta | 3-Layer(aba) Sandwich | Rossmann fold | Nucleoside phosphorylase domain | CATH (4.3.0) |
Protein Family Annotation Pfam Database Homepage
Chains | Accession | Name | Description | Comments | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PF01048 | Phosphorylase superfamily (PNP_UDP_1) | Phosphorylase superfamily | Members of this family include: purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) Uridine phosphorylase (UdRPase) 5'-methylthioadenosine phosphorylase (MTA phosphorylase) | Domain |
Gene Ontology: Gene Product Annotation Gene Ontology Database Homepage
InterPro: Protein Family Classification InterPro Database Homepage
Chains | Accession | Name | Type |
---|---|---|---|
IPR035994 | Nucleoside phosphorylase superfamily | Homologous Superfamily | |
IPR000845 | Nucleoside phosphorylase domain | Domain |
Structure Motif Annotation: Mechanism and Catalytic Site Atlas M-CSA Database Homepage
Chains | Enzyme Name | Description | Catalytic Residues |
---|---|---|---|
purine-nucleoside phosphorylase M-CSA #695 | Purine metabolism in the parasite Plasmodium has been identified as a promising target for antimalarial therapies due to slight alterations around the active site when compared to mammalian purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP). PNP is part of a salvage pathway for the biosynthesis of purines, which are essential to parasite survival due to location of the organism, erthrocytes and Plasmodium itself not being able to produce purines de novo . | EC: 2.4.2.1 (PDB Primary Data) EC: 2.4.2.44 (UniProt) |