2023
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24043999
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Protein–Ligand Interactions in Scarcity: The Stringent Response from Bacteria to Metazoa, and the Unanswered Questions

Abstract: The stringent response, originally identified in Escherichia coli as a signal that leads to reprogramming of gene expression under starvation or nutrient deprivation, is now recognized as ubiquitous in all bacteria, and also as part of a broader survival strategy in diverse, other stress conditions. Much of our insight into this phenomenon derives from the role of hyperphosphorylated guanosine derivatives (pppGpp, ppGpp, pGpp; guanosine penta-, tetra- and tri-phosphate, respectively) that are synthesized on st… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“… 12 Likewise, (p)ppGpp is mainly found in bacteria and bacteria-derived chloroplasts, with only a few reports on (p)ppGpp in metazoa. 23 Still, there are also universally conserved regulators of stress response pathways and one example is the ATPase YchF and its eukaryotic homolog Ola1. 24 , 25 , 26 , 27 , 28 YchF/Ola1 are members of the translation-factor-related superfamily of GTPases, 29 but they preferentially hydrolyze ATP rather than GTP due to a small variation within the nucleotide-binding site.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 12 Likewise, (p)ppGpp is mainly found in bacteria and bacteria-derived chloroplasts, with only a few reports on (p)ppGpp in metazoa. 23 Still, there are also universally conserved regulators of stress response pathways and one example is the ATPase YchF and its eukaryotic homolog Ola1. 24 , 25 , 26 , 27 , 28 YchF/Ola1 are members of the translation-factor-related superfamily of GTPases, 29 but they preferentially hydrolyze ATP rather than GTP due to a small variation within the nucleotide-binding site.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%