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Author(s) |
Nilgiriwala, K. S.; Bihani, S. C.; Das, A.; Prashar, V.; Kumar, M.; Ferrer, J. L.; Apte, S. K.; Hosur, M. V.
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Alkaline phosphatases (APs) are widely
distributed from microbes to humans and are involved in several
important biological processes such as phosphate nutrition,
signal transduction and pathogenesis. Alkaline phosphatases are
also useful in various industrial applications and in
recombinant DNA technology. A new AP enzyme from Sphingomonas
sp. strain BSAR-1, termed PhoK, has been shown to be useful in
uranium bioprecipitation. PhoK was expressed, purified and
crystallized. The crystals belonged to space group P43212
or P41212, with unit-cell
parameters a = b = 87.37, c = 168.16 A°, and
contained one enzyme molecule in the asymmetric unit. Native
diffraction data have been collected to 1.95 A° resolution at
the ESRF.
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