Phospholipase
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
A phospholipase is an enzyme that hydrolyzes phospholipids[1] into fatty acids and other lipophilic substances. There are four major classes, termed A, B, C and D, distinguished by the type of reaction which they catalyze:
- Phospholipase A
- Phospholipase A1 - cleaves the SN-1 acyl chain.
- Phospholipase A2 - cleaves the SN-2 acyl chain, releasing arachidonic acid.
- Phospholipase B - cleaves both SN-1 and SN-2 acyl chains; this enzyme is also known as a lysophospholipase.
- Phospholipase C - cleaves before the phosphate, releasing diacylglycerol and a phosphate-containing head group. Phospholipase Cs play a central role in signal transduction, releasing the second messenger inositol triphosphate.
- Phospholipase D - cleaves after the phosphate, releasing phosphatidic acid and an alcohol.
Types C and D are considered phosphodiesterases.
Phospholipase A2 acts on the intact lecithin molecule and hydrolyses the fatty acid esterified to the second carbon atom. The resulting products are lysolecithin and a fatty acid. Phospholipase A2 is an enzyme present in the venom of bees and viper snakes.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ "phospholipase" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
- ↑ D. M. Vasudevan & S. Sreekumari, Textbook of Biochemistry (5th ed.)
Further reading
- Tappia, Paramjit S. & Dhalla, Naranjan S. (Editors): Phospholipases in Health and Disease. Springer, 2014. ISBN 978-1-4939-0463-1 [Print]; ISBN 978-1-4939-0464-8 [eBook]
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Phospholipases. |
- Phospholipases at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
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