ADP-ribosylglycohydrolase

In molecular biology, ADP-ribosylglycohydrolase is a family of enzymes which catalyses the hydrolysis of ADP-ribosyl modifications from proteins, nucleic acids and small molecules. This family has three members in humans (ARH1-3): ARH1, also termed [Protein ADP-ribosylarginine] hydrolase, cleaves ADP-ribose-L-arginine, ARH2, which is predicted to be enzymatically inactive, and ARH3, which cleaves primarily ADP-ribose-L-serine, but was shown also to take poly(ADP-ribose), O-1''-acetyl-ADP-ribose and alpha-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide as substrates. The family also includes ADP-ribosyl-(dinitrogen reductase) hydrolase known to regulate dinitrogenase reductase, a key enzyme of the nitrogen fixating pathway in bacteria, and most surprisingly jellyfish crystallins, although these proteins

ADP-ribosylglycohydrolase

In molecular biology, ADP-ribosylglycohydrolase is a family of enzymes which catalyses the hydrolysis of ADP-ribosyl modifications from proteins, nucleic acids and small molecules. This family has three members in humans (ARH1-3): ARH1, also termed [Protein ADP-ribosylarginine] hydrolase, cleaves ADP-ribose-L-arginine, ARH2, which is predicted to be enzymatically inactive, and ARH3, which cleaves primarily ADP-ribose-L-serine, but was shown also to take poly(ADP-ribose), O-1''-acetyl-ADP-ribose and alpha-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide as substrates. The family also includes ADP-ribosyl-(dinitrogen reductase) hydrolase known to regulate dinitrogenase reductase, a key enzyme of the nitrogen fixating pathway in bacteria, and most surprisingly jellyfish crystallins, although these proteins