Human endogenous retrovirus K endopeptidase

Human endogenous retrovirus K endopeptidase (EC 3.4.23.50, human endogenous retrovirus K10 endopeptidase, endogenous retrovirus HERV-K10 putative protease, human endogenous retrovirus K retropepsin, HERV K10 endopeptidase, HERV K10 retropepsin, HERV-K PR, HERV-K protease, HERV-K113 protease, human endogenous retrovirus K113 protease, human retrovirus K10 retropepsin) is an enzyme derived from an endogenous retrovirus.[1] This enzyme catalyses the following chemical reaction:

Processing at the authentic HIV-1 PR recognition site and release of the mature p17 matrix and the p24 capsid protein, as a result of the cleavage of the -SQNY-PIVQ- cleavage site.
Human endogenous retrovirus K endopeptidase
Identifiers
EC no.3.4.23.50
Databases
IntEnzIntEnz view
BRENDABRENDA entry
ExPASyNiceZyme view
KEGGKEGG entry
MetaCycmetabolic pathway
PRIAMprofile
PDB structuresRCSB PDB PDBe PDBsum
Search
PMCarticles
PubMedarticles
NCBIproteins

This enzyme belongs to the peptidase family A2 (retropepsins).

References

  1. Towler EM, Gulnik SV, Bhat TN, Xie D, Gustschina E, Sumpter TR, Robertson N, Jones C, Sauter M, Mueller-Lantzsch N, Debouck C, Erickson JW (December 1998). "Functional characterization of the protease of human endogenous retrovirus, K10: can it complement HIV-1 protease?". Biochemistry. 37 (49): 17137–44. doi:10.1021/bi9818927. PMID 9860826.
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