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  • Phylogeny and evolution of aldehyde dehydrogenase-homologous folate enzymes

    Author(s)
    Strickland, Kyle C
    Holmes, Roger S
    Oleinik, Natalia V
    Krupenko, Natalia I
    Krupenko, Sergey A
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Holmes, Roger S.
    Year published
    2011
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Folate coenzymes function as one-carbon group carriers in intracellular metabolic pathways. Folate-dependent reactions are compartmentalized within the cell and are catalyzed by two distinct groups of enzymes, cytosolic and mitochondrial. Some folate enzymes are present in both compartments and are likely the products of gene duplications. A well-characterized cytosolic folate enzyme, FDH (10-formyltetrahydro-folate dehydrogenase, ALDH1L1), contains a domain with significant sequence similarity to aldehyde dehydrogenases. This domain enables FDH to catalyze the NADP+-dependent conversion of short-chain aldehydes to corresponding ...
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    Folate coenzymes function as one-carbon group carriers in intracellular metabolic pathways. Folate-dependent reactions are compartmentalized within the cell and are catalyzed by two distinct groups of enzymes, cytosolic and mitochondrial. Some folate enzymes are present in both compartments and are likely the products of gene duplications. A well-characterized cytosolic folate enzyme, FDH (10-formyltetrahydro-folate dehydrogenase, ALDH1L1), contains a domain with significant sequence similarity to aldehyde dehydrogenases. This domain enables FDH to catalyze the NADP+-dependent conversion of short-chain aldehydes to corresponding acids in vitro. The aldehyde dehydrogenase-like reaction is the final step in the overall FDH mechanism, by which a tetrahydrofolate-bound formyl group is oxidized to CO2 in an NADP+-dependent fashion. We have recently cloned and characterized another folate enzyme containing an ALDH domain, a mitochondrial FDH. Here the biological roles of the two enzymes, a comparison of the respective genes, and some potential evolutionary implications are discussed. The phylogenic analysis suggests that the vertebrate ALDH1L2 gene arose from a duplication event of the ALDH1L1 gene prior to the emergence of osseous fish >500 millions years ago.
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    Journal Title
    Chemico-Biological Interactions
    Volume
    191
    Issue
    1-3
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cbi.2010.12.025
    Subject
    Biochemistry and cell biology
    Genomics
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/42602
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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