CATH Classification

Domain Context

CATH Clusters

Superfamily Spore Coat Polysaccharide Biosynthesis Protein SpsA; Chain A
Functional Family Glycogenin-1 isoform 1

Enzyme Information

2.4.1.186
Glycogenin glucosyltransferase.
based on mapping to UniProt O15488
UDP-alpha-D-glucose + glycogenin = UDP + alpha-D-glucosylglycogenin.
-!- The first reaction of this enzyme is to catalyze its own glucosylation, normally at a specific Tyr of the protein if this group is free; when the Tyr is replaced by Thr or Phe, the enzyme's self-glucosylation activity is lost but its intermolecular transglucosylation ability remains. -!- It continues to glucosylate an existing glucosyl group until a length of about 5-13 residues has been formed. -!- Further lengthening of the glycogen chain is then carried out by EC 2.4.1.11. -!- Not highly specific for the donor, using UDP-xylose in addition to UDP-glucose (although not glucosylating or xylosylating a xylosyl group so added). -!- It can also use CDP-glucose and TDP-glucose, but not ADP-glucose or GDP-glucose. -!- Similarly it is not highly specific for the acceptor, using water (i.e. hydrolyzing UDP-glucose) among others. -!- Various forms of the enzyme exist, and different forms predominate in different organs. -!- Thus primate liver contains glycogenin-2, of molecular mass 66 kDa, whereas the more widespread form is glycogenin-1, with a molecular mass of 38 kDa. -!- Formerly EC 2.4.1.112.

UniProtKB Entries (1)

O15488
GLYG2_HUMAN
Homo sapiens
Glycogenin-2

PDB Structure

PDB 4UEG
External Links
Method X-RAY DIFFRACTION
Organism
Primary Citation
Crystal Structure of Human Glycogenin-2 Catalytic Domain
Fairhead, M., Strain-Damerell, C., Krojer, T., Froese, D.S., Kopec, J., Nowak, R., Burgess-Brown, N., von Delft, F., Arrowsmith, C., Edwards, A., Bountra, C., Yue, W.W.
To be Published
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