Not available outside of the UK & Ireland.
Application
Pyrophosphatase, Inorganic from Escherichia coli has been used as a component of transcription buffer.
Pyrophosphatase, inorganic from Escherichia coli has been used in assay for conjugation of ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like proteins. It has been used for one-pot three-enzyme system for synthesis of Lewis x and sialyl Lewis x antigens.
Inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase) is a ubiquitous enzyme catalyzing the reaction PPi + H2O → 2Pi. It plays an important role in protein, RNA, and DNA synthesis.
Biochem/physiol Actions
Pyrophosphatase from E coli (E-PPase) is an essential enzyme in yeast and bacteria The active site residues are crucial for binding to magnesium.
General description
Pyrophosphatase from E coli (E-PPase) has a broader pH optimum and contains four divalent cations per subunit. It comprises 175 amino acids with additional aspartate residue in the active site cavity. Structurally E-PPase is a homohexamer with six identical 20 kDa subunits. Magnesium is a cofactor for E-PPase.
Other Notes
A homohexameric protein containing 175 amino acid residues per subunit, its activity is Mg2+ dependent. It is a relatively thermostable protein.
Packaging
1 mg in glass bottle
Physical form
Lyophilized powder in Tris-buffered salts containing protease inhibitors
Unit Definition
One unit will release 1.0 µmole of inorganic orthophosphate per minute at pH 9 at 25 °C.
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