Introduction: Dead enzymes are gene products (proteins) that lack key residues required for catalytic activity. In the pre-genome era, dead enzymes were thought to occur only rarely. However, they now have been shown to represent upwards of 10% of the total enzyme population in many families. The aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) gene family encodes proteins that, depending on the isozyme, may be either catalytically-active or -inactive. Importantly, several ALDHs exhibit biological activities independent of their catalytic activity. For many of these, the physiological and pathophysiological functions remain to be established.
Areas covered: This article reviews the non-enzymatic functions of the ALDH superfamily. In addition, a search for additional non-catalytic ALDH records is undertaken. Our computational analyses reveal that there are currently 182 protein records (divided into 19 groups) that meet the criteria for dead enzymes.
Expert opinion: Dead enzymes have the potential to exert biological actions through protein-protein interaction and allosteric modulation of the activity of an active enzyme. In addition, a dead enzyme may also influence availability of substrate for other active enzymes by sequestering substrate, and/or anchoring the substrate to a particular subcellular space. A large number of putatively non-catalytic ALDH proteins exist that warrant further study.
Keywords: aldehyde dehydrogenase; computational analysis; dead enzymes.