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Aspartate—ammonia ligase

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Enzyme
Aspartate—ammonia ligase
Identifiers
EC no.6.3.1.1
CAS no.9023-69-2
Databases
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BRENDABRENDA entry
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MetaCycmetabolic pathway
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Gene OntologyAmiGO / QuickGO
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In enzymology, an aspartate—ammonia ligase (EC 6.3.1.1) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction

ATP + L-aspartate + NH3 {\displaystyle \rightleftharpoons } AMP + diphosphate + L-asparagine

The 3 substrates of this enzyme are ATP, L-aspartate, and NH3, whereas its 3 products are AMP, diphosphate, and L-asparagine.

This enzyme belongs to the family of ligases, specifically those forming carbon-nitrogen bonds as acid-D-ammonia (or amine) ligases (amide synthases). The systematic name of this enzyme class is L-aspartate:ammonia ligase (AMP-forming). Other names in common use include asparagine synthetase, and L-asparagine synthetase. This enzyme participates in 3 metabolic pathways: alanine and aspartate metabolism, cyanoamino acid metabolism, and nitrogen metabolism.

Structural studies

As of late 2007, two structures have been solved for this class of enzymes, with PDB accession codes 11AS and 12AS.

References

Enzymes: CO CS and CN ligases (EC 6.1-6.3)
6.1: Carbon-Oxygen
6.2: Carbon-Sulfur
6.3: Carbon-Nitrogen
Enzymes
Activity
Regulation
Classification
Kinetics
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