Also known as paraoxon esterase, phosphotriesterase, organophosphorus acid anhydrase, aryltriphosphatase, organophosphorus hydrolase, organophosphate hydrolase, aryltriphosphate dialkylphosphohydrolase, pirimiphos-methyloxon esterase
Aryldialkylphosphatase (EC 3.1.8.1, also known as phosphotriesterase, organophosphate hydrolase, parathion hydrolase, paraoxonase, and parathion aryl esterase; systematic name aryltriphosphate dialkylphosphohydrolase) is a metalloenzyme that hydrolyzes the triester linkage found in organophosphate insecticides:
Aryldialkylphosphatase (EC 3.1.8.1, also known as phosphotriesterase, organophosphate hydrolase, parathion hydrolase, paraoxonase, and parathion aryl esterase; systematic name aryltriphosphate dialkylphosphohydrolase) is a metalloenzyme that hydrolyzes the triester linkage found in organophosphate insecticides: an aryl dialkyl phosphate + H2O \rightleftharpoons dialkyl phosphate + an aryl alcohol
The gene (opd, for organophosphate-degrading) that codes for the enzyme is found in a large plasmid (pSC1, 51Kb) endogenous to Pseudomonas diminuta, although the gene has also been found in many other bacterial species such as Flavobacterium sp. (ATCC27551), where it is also encoded in an extrachromosomal element (pSM55, 43Kb).
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).