Home News About DMDM Database Statistics Research Publications Contact  

 
  Domain Name: bacterial_phosphagen
Phosphagen (guanidino) kinases found in bacteria. Phosphagen (guanidino) kinases are enzymes that transphosphorylate a high energy phosphoguanidino compound, such as phosphocreatine (PCr) or phosphoarginine, which is used as an energy-storage and -transport metabolite, to ADP, thereby creating ATP. This subfamily is specific to bacteria and lacks an N-terminal domain, which otherwise forms part of the substrate binding site. Most of the catalytic residues are found in the larger C-terminal domain, however, which appears conserved in these bacterial proteins. Their functions have not been characterized.
No pairwise interactions are available for this conserved domain.

Total Mutations Found: 0
Total Disease Mutations Found: 0
This domain occurred 4 times on human genes (6 proteins).




Tips:
 If you've navigated here from a protein, hovering over a position on the weblogo will display the corresponding protein position for that domain position.

 The histograms below the weblogo indicate mutations found on the domain. Red is for disease (OMIM) and blue is for SNPs.

 Functional Features are displayed as orange boxes under the histograms. You can choose which features are displayed in the box below.



Range on the Protein:  

   Protein ID            Protein Position

Domain Position:  


Feature Name:Total Found:
ADP binding site
phosphagen binding site
substrate specificity loo














Weblogos are Copyright (c) 2002 Regents of the University of California




Please Cite: Peterson, T.A., Adadey, A., Santana-Cruz ,I., Sun, Y., Winder A, Kann, M.G., (2010) DMDM: Domain Mapping of Disease Mutations. Bioinformatics 26 (19), 2458-2459.

   |   1000 Hilltop Circle, Baltimore, MD 21250   |   Department of Biological Sciences   |   Phone: 410-455-2258