5o01

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: '''Unreleased structure''' The entry 5o01 is ON HOLD Authors: Lowe, J., Deng, X. Description: Crystal structure of BtubC (BKLC) from P. vanneervenii Category: Unreleased Structures...)
Current revision (12:18, 22 November 2023) (edit) (undo)
 
(3 intermediate revisions not shown.)
Line 1: Line 1:
-
'''Unreleased structure'''
 
-
The entry 5o01 is ON HOLD
+
==Crystal structure of BtubC (BKLC) from P. vanneervenii==
 +
<StructureSection load='5o01' size='340' side='right'caption='[[5o01]], [[Resolution|resolution]] 2.50&Aring;' scene=''>
 +
== Structural highlights ==
 +
<table><tr><td colspan='2'>[[5o01]] is a 2 chain structure with sequence from [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosthecobacter_vanneervenii Prosthecobacter vanneervenii]. Full crystallographic information is available from [http://oca.weizmann.ac.il/oca-bin/ocashort?id=5O01 OCA]. For a <b>guided tour on the structure components</b> use [https://proteopedia.org/fgij/fg.htm?mol=5O01 FirstGlance]. <br>
 +
</td></tr><tr id='method'><td class="sblockLbl"><b>[[Empirical_models|Method:]]</b></td><td class="sblockDat" id="methodDat">X-ray diffraction, [[Resolution|Resolution]] 2.5&#8491;</td></tr>
 +
<tr id='resources'><td class="sblockLbl"><b>Resources:</b></td><td class="sblockDat"><span class='plainlinks'>[https://proteopedia.org/fgij/fg.htm?mol=5o01 FirstGlance], [http://oca.weizmann.ac.il/oca-bin/ocaids?id=5o01 OCA], [https://pdbe.org/5o01 PDBe], [https://www.rcsb.org/pdb/explore.do?structureId=5o01 RCSB], [https://www.ebi.ac.uk/pdbsum/5o01 PDBsum], [https://prosat.h-its.org/prosat/prosatexe?pdbcode=5o01 ProSAT]</span></td></tr>
 +
</table>
 +
== Function ==
 +
[https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/A8Y5U5_9BACT A8Y5U5_9BACT]
 +
<div style="background-color:#fffaf0;">
 +
== Publication Abstract from PubMed ==
 +
Microtubules, the dynamic, yet stiff hollow tubes built from alphabeta-tubulin protein heterodimers, are thought to be present only in eukaryotic cells. Here, we report a 3.6-A helical reconstruction electron cryomicroscopy structure of four-stranded mini microtubules formed by bacterial tubulin-like Prosthecobacter dejongeii BtubAB proteins. Despite their much smaller diameter, mini microtubules share many key structural features with eukaryotic microtubules, such as an M-loop, alternating subunits, and a seam that breaks overall helical symmetry. Using in vitro total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, we show that bacterial mini microtubules treadmill and display dynamic instability, another hallmark of eukaryotic microtubules. The third protein in the btub gene cluster, BtubC, previously known as "bacterial kinesin light chain," binds along protofilaments every 8 nm, inhibits BtubAB mini microtubule catastrophe, and increases rescue. Our work reveals that some bacteria contain regulated and dynamic cytomotive microtubule systems that were once thought to be only useful in much larger and sophisticated eukaryotic cells.
-
Authors: Lowe, J., Deng, X.
+
Four-stranded mini microtubules formed by Prosthecobacter BtubAB show dynamic instability.,Deng X, Fink G, Bharat TAM, He S, Kureisaite-Ciziene D, Lowe J Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Jul 18;114(29):E5950-E5958. doi:, 10.1073/pnas.1705062114. Epub 2017 Jul 3. PMID:28673988<ref>PMID:28673988</ref>
-
Description: Crystal structure of BtubC (BKLC) from P. vanneervenii
+
From MEDLINE&reg;/PubMed&reg;, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.<br>
-
[[Category: Unreleased Structures]]
+
</div>
-
[[Category: Lowe, J]]
+
<div class="pdbe-citations 5o01" style="background-color:#fffaf0;"></div>
-
[[Category: Deng, X]]
+
== References ==
 +
<references/>
 +
__TOC__
 +
</StructureSection>
 +
[[Category: Large Structures]]
 +
[[Category: Prosthecobacter vanneervenii]]
 +
[[Category: Deng X]]
 +
[[Category: Lowe J]]

Current revision

Crystal structure of BtubC (BKLC) from P. vanneervenii

PDB ID 5o01

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools