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Literature summary extracted from

  • Yang, B.Z.; Ding, J.H.; Enghild, J.J.; Bao, Y.; Chen, Y.T.
    Molecular cloning and nucleotide sequence of cDNA encoding human muscle glycogen debranching enzyme (1992), J. Biol. Chem., 267, 9294-9299.
    View publication on PubMed

Cloned(Commentary)

EC Number Cloned (Comment) Organism
3.2.1.33 glycogen debranching enzyme, cDNA Homo sapiens

Molecular Weight [Da]

EC Number Molecular Weight [Da] Molecular Weight Maximum [Da] Comment Organism
3.2.1.33 172600
-
glycogen debranching enzyme, calculated from cDNA-derived amino acid sequence Homo sapiens

Organism

EC Number Organism UniProt Comment Textmining
3.2.1.33 Homo sapiens
-
healthy and patient with type III glycogen storage disease
-
3.2.1.33 Sus scrofa
-
-
-

Purification (Commentary)

EC Number Purification (Comment) Organism
3.2.1.33 glycogen debranching enzyme Homo sapiens
3.2.1.33 glycogen debranching enzyme Sus scrofa

Source Tissue

EC Number Source Tissue Comment Organism Textmining
3.2.1.33 Fanconi anemia lymphoid cell line
-
Homo sapiens
-
3.2.1.33 muscle
-
Homo sapiens
-
3.2.1.33 muscle
-
Sus scrofa
-

Subunits

EC Number Subunits Comment Organism
3.2.1.33 monomer
-
Homo sapiens
3.2.1.33 monomer
-
Sus scrofa

Synonyms

EC Number Synonyms Comment Organism
3.2.1.33 glycogen debranching system EC 3.2.1.33 found in mammals and yeast is in a single polypeptide chain containing two active centres. The other activity is similar to that of EC 2.4.1.25, 4-alpha-glucanotransferase, which acts on the glycogen phosphorylase limit dextrin chains to expose the single glucose residues, which the 6-alpha-glucosidase activity can hydrolyse. Together, these two activities constitute the glycogen debranching system Homo sapiens
3.2.1.33 glycogen debranching system EC 3.2.1.33 found in mammals and yeast is in a single polypeptide chain containing two active centres. The other activity is similar to that of EC 2.4.1.25, 4-alpha-glucanotransferase, which acts on the glycogen phosphorylase limit dextrin chains to expose the single glucose residues, which the 6-alpha-glucosidase activity can hydrolyse. Together, these two activities constitute the glycogen debranching system Sus scrofa