EC Number |
General Information |
Reference |
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2.7.13.3 | evolution |
Brucella spp. genomes encode a LOV-domain-containing protein that is associated to a PAS (Per, Arnt and Sim) domain plus a HK domain (LOVHK), which belongs to the HWE family |
-, 741235 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
CheA differs from sensor histidine kinases in several ways: CheA does not contain a transmembrane domain, relying instead on P5 and CheW for interaction with transmembrane components. It has the phosphorylatable His residue on a separate domain (P1) instead of the dimerization domain (P3), and it utilizes a separate docking domain (P2) for CheY. P2 is not necessary for phosphotransfer to the response regulator CheY per se but variants lacking the P2 domain (DELTAP2) exhibit a reduced phosphotransfer rate relative to full-length CheA (CheAFL) and support a lower extent of chemotaxis. The linkers between the CheA domains play important roles in CheA activity |
740869 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
different structures of FimS kinase domains in strains strain ATCC 33277 and strain W83 |
-, 740616 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
different structures of FimS kinase domains in strains strain ATCC 33277 and strain W83. Although the production of FimR in W83 is modest, the protein still is detectable and can be functional because its amino acid sequence is almost identical to that of strain ATCC 33277, except for the alteration of one residue from serine to threonine, S209T |
-, 740616 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
glycerol and manganese have a similar biofilm-promoting effect in two related Bacillus species, Bacillus licheniformis and Bacillus cereus, indicating that the biofilm-promoting effect of GM is conserved in Bacillus species |
740621 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
histidine kinase Shk1 is a member of the histidine kinase class III, whose members are all known to signal through the high-osmolarity glycerol mitogen-activated protein kinase |
-, 741026 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
the Arabidopsis thaliana genome encodes eight canonical HKs (AHK1-5, ETR1, ERS1, and CKI1), five canonical AHPs (AHP1-5), and one pseudo-AHP (AHP6) that carries an asparagine instead of the critical histidine residue |
741028 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
the Brucella histidine kinase domain belongs to the HWE histidine kinase family. The HWE HK domains are present in LOV-HKs and bacteriophytochromes among other proteins |
740870 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
the class I enzyme DesK belongs to the HK family HPK7, which includes the nitrogen metabolism regulators NarX/Q and the antibiotic sensor LiaS among other important sensor kinases |
-, 740689 |
2.7.13.3 | evolution |
the CusS histidine kinase has overall sequence identity to putative metal-sensing HKs such as SilS (56%), CopS (42%), PcoS (38%) and CinS (35%) |
740103 |