From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
DNA replication protein DnaD
Identifiers
Organism Bacillus subtilis (strain 168)
SymboldnaD
Entrez 939040
RefSeq (Prot) NP_390116.1
UniProt P39787
Other data
Chromosome genomic: 2.35 - 2.35 Mb
Search for
Structures Swiss-model
Domains InterPro

DnaD is a 232 amino acid long protein that is part of the primosome involved in prokaryotic DNA replication. [1] In Bacillus subtilis, genetic analysis has revealed three primosomal proteins, DnaB, DnaD, and DnaI, that have no obvious homologues in E. coli. They are involved in primosome function both at arrested replication forks and at the chromosomal origin. [2]

DnaB and DnaD proteins are both multimeric and bind individually to DNA. DnaD induces DnaB to bind. DnaD alone and the DnaD/DnaB complex then interact with PriA of Bacillus subtilis at several DNA sites. This suggests that the nucleoprotein assembly is sequential in the PriA, DnaD, DnaB order. [3]

References

  1. ^ Bruand C, Sorokin A, Serror P, Ehrlich SD (February 1995). "Nucleotide sequence of the Bacillus subtilis dnaD gene". Microbiology. 141 ( Pt 2) (2): 321–2. doi: 10.1099/13500872-141-2-321. PMID  7704260.
  2. ^ Ishigo-Oka D, Ogasawara N, Moriya S (March 2001). "DnaD protein of Bacillus subtilis interacts with DnaA, the initiator protein of replication". Journal of Bacteriology. 183 (6): 2148–50. doi: 10.1128/JB.183.6.2148-2150.2001. PMC  95117. PMID  11222620.
  3. ^ Marsin S, McGovern S, Ehrlich SD, Bruand C, Polard P (December 2001). "Early steps of Bacillus subtilis primosome assembly". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 276 (49): 45818–25. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M101996200. PMID  11585815.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
DNA replication protein DnaD
Identifiers
Organism Bacillus subtilis (strain 168)
SymboldnaD
Entrez 939040
RefSeq (Prot) NP_390116.1
UniProt P39787
Other data
Chromosome genomic: 2.35 - 2.35 Mb
Search for
Structures Swiss-model
Domains InterPro

DnaD is a 232 amino acid long protein that is part of the primosome involved in prokaryotic DNA replication. [1] In Bacillus subtilis, genetic analysis has revealed three primosomal proteins, DnaB, DnaD, and DnaI, that have no obvious homologues in E. coli. They are involved in primosome function both at arrested replication forks and at the chromosomal origin. [2]

DnaB and DnaD proteins are both multimeric and bind individually to DNA. DnaD induces DnaB to bind. DnaD alone and the DnaD/DnaB complex then interact with PriA of Bacillus subtilis at several DNA sites. This suggests that the nucleoprotein assembly is sequential in the PriA, DnaD, DnaB order. [3]

References

  1. ^ Bruand C, Sorokin A, Serror P, Ehrlich SD (February 1995). "Nucleotide sequence of the Bacillus subtilis dnaD gene". Microbiology. 141 ( Pt 2) (2): 321–2. doi: 10.1099/13500872-141-2-321. PMID  7704260.
  2. ^ Ishigo-Oka D, Ogasawara N, Moriya S (March 2001). "DnaD protein of Bacillus subtilis interacts with DnaA, the initiator protein of replication". Journal of Bacteriology. 183 (6): 2148–50. doi: 10.1128/JB.183.6.2148-2150.2001. PMC  95117. PMID  11222620.
  3. ^ Marsin S, McGovern S, Ehrlich SD, Bruand C, Polard P (December 2001). "Early steps of Bacillus subtilis primosome assembly". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 276 (49): 45818–25. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M101996200. PMID  11585815.

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