taud
TauD stands for taurine dioxygenase, a non-heme iron(II)/α-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase found in bacteria that metabolize taurine. In the taurine utilization pathway, TauD catalyzes the oxidative cleavage of taurine to aminoacetaldehyde and sulfite, using molecular oxygen and 2-oxoglutarate as cosubstrates; the decarboxylation of 2-OG yields succinate and CO2. The overall reaction is taurine plus 2-oxoglutarate and O2 producing aminoacetaldehyde, sulfite, succinate, and CO2.
Mechanistically, TauD belongs to the family of non-heme iron(II)/α-ketoglutarate dioxygenases and features a conserved iron center
Structure and genetics-wise, TauD is usually a cytosolic enzyme of roughly 30–40 kilodaltons and is encoded
Significance-wise, TauD is a model enzyme for the class of nonheme Fe(II)/αKG dioxygenases, illustrating how O2