Sda

From SubtiWiki
Revision as of 14:08, 14 March 2009 by Aschmei (talk | contribs) (Expression and regulation)
Jump to: navigation, search
  • Description: Sda is a checkpoint protein that is upregulated in response to replication stress (Burkholder et al 2001, Cell). Sda inhibits the autokinase activity of KinA (and likely KinB as well). This in its turn results in reduced levels of Spo0A~P. Thus, replication stressed cells will not iniate sporulation

    Sda is rapidly turned over by the ClpP/X system because of some uncharged residues at its C-terminus Ruvolo et al 2006, MolMic.


Gene name sda
Synonyms
Essential no
Product developmental checkpoint protein
Function mediates a developmental checkpoint coupling initiation of

sporulation (phosphorylation of Spo0A) to the function

of replication initiation proteins

MW, pI 6 kDa, 5.605
Gene length, protein length 156 bp, 52 aa
Immediate neighbours yloV, sdaAA
Gene sequence (+200bp) Protein sequence
Genetic context
Sda context.gif





The gene

Basic information

  • Coordinates:

Phenotypes of a mutant

  • sporulates at a higher frequency
  • will sporulate in the presence of replication stress

Database entries

  • DBTBS entry: [1]
  • SubtiList entry: [2]

Additional information

The protein

Basic information/ Evolution

  • Catalyzed reaction/ biological activity:
  • Protein family:
  • Paralogous protein(s):

Extended information on the protein

  • Kinetic information:
  • Domains:
  • Modification:
  • Cofactor(s):
  • Effectors of protein activity:
  • Interactions:
  • Localization:

Database entries

  • Structure:
  • Swiss prot entry:
  • KEGG entry:
  • E.C. number:

Additional information

Expression and regulation

  • Operon:

monocistron

  • Sigma factor:

SigA

  • Regulation:

DnaA

  • Regulatory mechanism:

Probably activated by DnaA under replication stress

  • Additional information:

Biological materials

  • Mutant:
  • Expression vector:
  • lacZ fusion:
  • GFP fusion:
  • two-hybrid system:
  • Antibody:

Labs working on this gene/protein

Your additional remarks

References

  1. Author1, Author2 & Author3 (year) Title Journal volume: page-page. PubMed