transissomerases
Transissomerases are a proposed class of enzymes that catalyze the interconversion between trans and cis geometries of substrate molecules. The term is not uniformly used in standard enzyme nomenclature; much of the literature uses cis-trans isomerases (EC 5.2) or, for peptide bonds before proline, peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerases (PPIases; EC 5.2.1). When the term transissomerase appears, it is typically to emphasize a role in geometric rearrangements that alter a substrate’s conformation and often its activity.
Mechanistically, transissomerases show diverse strategies depending on the substrate. In polypeptides, the archetype is the PPIase,
Biologically, cis–trans isomerization governs folding pathways, allosteric regulation, and maturation of many proteins, and can influence
See also: isomerase, cis-trans isomerase, peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase.