2007
DOI: 10.1101/gad.1546107
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Treadmilling of a prokaryotic tubulin-like protein, TubZ, required for plasmid stability in Bacillus thuringiensis

Abstract: Prokaryotes rely on a distant tubulin homolog, FtsZ, for assembling the cytokinetic ring essential for cell division, but are otherwise generally thought to lack tubulin-like polymers that participate in processes such as DNA segregation. Here we characterize a protein (TubZ) from the Bacillus thuringiensis virulence plasmid pBtoxis, which is a member of the tubulin/FtsZ GTPase superfamily but is only distantly related to both FtsZ and tubulin. TubZ assembles dynamic, linear polymers that exhibit directional p… Show more

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Cited by 176 publications
(229 citation statements)
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“…In B. thuringienis, TubZ forms filaments of several lm (2-5) length [Larsen et al, 2007]. Interestingly, the filaments are highly dynamic and show treadmillinglike extension at the plus ends (average of 1.48 6 0.63 lm/min) and depolymerisation at the minus ends.…”
Section: Ftsz-bacterial Tubulinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In B. thuringienis, TubZ forms filaments of several lm (2-5) length [Larsen et al, 2007]. Interestingly, the filaments are highly dynamic and show treadmillinglike extension at the plus ends (average of 1.48 6 0.63 lm/min) and depolymerisation at the minus ends.…”
Section: Ftsz-bacterial Tubulinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Protein filaments confined to spherical or rod-shaped cell membranes are known to arrange into helical (Shih et al, 2003), ring (Bi and Lutkenhaus, 1991) and line (Larsen et al, 2007) structures. In the cytoplasm, subunits can assemble into tubules, asters and stars (Mejillano et al, 2004;Haviv et al, 2006).…”
Section: O D E L I N G M E M B R a N E -B O U N D P O Ly M E R I Zmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although evolutionarily unrelated, both ParA and ParM proteins are polymerization-based engines that assemble into cytoskeletal structures involved in DNA transport, positioning, and segregation (3,4). Type III systems were identified more recently: this discovery has opened up unforeseen perspectives on prokaryotic cytoskeletal proteins mediating genome segregation (7)(8)(9). In PNAS, Ni et al shed light on the molecular mechanisms underpinning the function of type III partition cassettes by reporting the structures of TubR and TubZ proteins encoded by the pBtoxis plasmid from Bacillus thuringiensis (10).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Type III segregation modules are found on large plasmids of the Bacillus cereus group of bacteria (7,9). The partition cassette of plasmid pBtoxis harbors two genes: orf157 encoding an 11.6-kDa specific DNA-binding protein, known as TubR, and orf156 encoding a 54.4-kDa protein, designated as TubZ, which is a distant homolog of both tubulin and FtsZ (7,8).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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