2016
DOI: 10.1128/jb.00333-15
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Diversity of Cyclic Di-GMP-Binding Proteins and Mechanisms

Abstract: Cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP) synthetases and hydrolases (GGDEF, EAL, and HD-GYP domains) can be readily identified in bacterial genome sequences by using standard bioinformatic tools. In contrast, identification of c-di-GMP receptors remains a difficult task, and the current list of experimentally characterized c-di-GMP-binding proteins is likely incomplete. Several classes of c-di-GMP-binding proteins have been structurally characterized; for some others, the binding sites have been identified; and for several po… Show more

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Cited by 242 publications
(263 citation statements)
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References 96 publications
(125 reference statements)
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“…1). Our bioinformatic analyses expand upon the proteins described for B. pseudomallei K96243 in the large-scale analysis published by Chou and Galperin (see the companion table entitled "Distribution of GGDEF, EAL, HD-GYP, and PilZ domains in bacterial genomes" in reference 14).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…1). Our bioinformatic analyses expand upon the proteins described for B. pseudomallei K96243 in the large-scale analysis published by Chou and Galperin (see the companion table entitled "Distribution of GGDEF, EAL, HD-GYP, and PilZ domains in bacterial genomes" in reference 14).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, we refer to these proteins as belonging to the HD superfamily of proteins rather than designating them as HD-GYP proteins. Bp1026b_I2285 and Bp1026b_II0700 are not included as HD-GYP proteins in the curated table entitled "Distribution of GGDEF, EAL, HD-GYP, and PilZ domains in bacterial genomes" (14). However, bioinformatics analyses indicate that these proteins contain HDOD and HDc domains, respectively ( Fig.…”
Section: Ggdef-eal Composite Proteinsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, homologous GGDEF-EAL receptors have variations in their cyclic di-GMP binding sites and bind cyclic di-GMP in different conformations, which reflects the structural polymorphism of this second messenger (48,49), as well as binding site flexibility (Fig. 5C) (50). Such polymorphisms make it still challenging to predict cyclic di-GMP binding residues by bioinformatics.…”
Section: Classification Of Divergent Domain Membersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Computational screening of alpha-rhizobial genomes identified a high number of cdG-related genes, with the highest number of 55 genes in Bradyrhizobium japonicum (27). The S. meliloti Rm1021 type strain (28) encodes 20 proteins containing either a GGDEF or EAL domain or both and two PilZ domain proteins (26,27).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%