phosphoconvertases
Phosphoconvertases are a proposed family of enzymes that catalyze reversible interconversion of phosphorylated substrates, enabling the exchange of phosphate groups between molecules. Unlike canonical kinases and phosphatases, phosphoconvertases are defined by their ability to facilitate bidirectional phosphate transfer within a shared active site, rather than committing to a single direction in metabolism.
The substrate range is broad, including sugar phosphates, nucleotides, and lipid phosphatides. Reactions may produce inorganic
Mechanistically, many phosphoconvertases are thought to proceed via transient phosphoenzyme intermediates and require divalent metal cofactors
Distribution and function: reports span bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes, though well-defined examples are scarce. In cells
Classification and status: phosphoconvertases are not yet recognized as a single enzyme family; rather, the term
History and context: the concept emerged from observations that phosphate remodeling can occur without the classical