2000
DOI: 10.1128/jb.182.6.1541-1548.2000
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TraG from RP4 and TraG and VirD4 from Ti Plasmids Confer Relaxosome Specificity to the Conjugal Transfer System of pTiC58

Abstract: Plasmid conjugation systems are composed of two components, the DNA transfer and replication system, or Dtr, and the mating pair formation system, or Mpf. During conjugal transfer an essential factor, called the coupling protein, is thought to interface the Dtr, in the form of the relaxosome, with the Mpf, in the form of the mating bridge. These proteins, such as TraG from the IncP1 plasmid RP4 (TraG RP4 ) and TraG and VirD4 from the conjugal transfer and T-DNA transfer systems of Ti plasmids, are believed to … Show more

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Cited by 107 publications
(97 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
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“…In conjugation experiments with chimeric conjugation systems, composed of Mpf and Dtr systems originating from two diVerent plasmids, the CP is the factor that determines whether the chimeric machinery is functional or not. By exchanging the CP, the speciWcity of a given Mpf system for transport of diVerent mobilizable plasmids can be switched, implying that CPs represent an interface between the Mpf complex and the DNA substrate (Cabezón et al, 1994Hamilton et al, 2000;Lessl et al, 1993). This conclusion has been validated by biochemical data: CPs of conjugation systems have indeed been detected to directly interact with the relaxase, which is the Dtr component that covalently attaches to the DNA substrate during conjugative transfer (Llosa et al, 2003;Pansegrau and Lanka, 1996b;Schröder et al, 2002;Szpirer et al, 2000).…”
Section: Cp (Vird4): the Cytoplasmic Gate To The Secretion Channelmentioning
confidence: 85%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In conjugation experiments with chimeric conjugation systems, composed of Mpf and Dtr systems originating from two diVerent plasmids, the CP is the factor that determines whether the chimeric machinery is functional or not. By exchanging the CP, the speciWcity of a given Mpf system for transport of diVerent mobilizable plasmids can be switched, implying that CPs represent an interface between the Mpf complex and the DNA substrate (Cabezón et al, 1994Hamilton et al, 2000;Lessl et al, 1993). This conclusion has been validated by biochemical data: CPs of conjugation systems have indeed been detected to directly interact with the relaxase, which is the Dtr component that covalently attaches to the DNA substrate during conjugative transfer (Llosa et al, 2003;Pansegrau and Lanka, 1996b;Schröder et al, 2002;Szpirer et al, 2000).…”
Section: Cp (Vird4): the Cytoplasmic Gate To The Secretion Channelmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Remarkably, the VirB10-CP interaction is not system-restricted: VirB10-like proteins can interact, although with lower aYnity, with CPs of heterologous T4SS, as suggested by data of a twohybrid interaction analysis (Llosa et al, 2003). The versatility of the VirB10-CP interaction largely explains the functionality of chimeric bacterial conjugation systems containing an Mpf system of one plasmid and a Dtr system of a diVerent plasmid (Bolland et al, 1990;Cabezón et al, 1997;Hamilton et al, 2000).…”
Section: Virb10: An Energy Sensor Gating the Mpf Channelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Like VirD4, its homologues in the E. coli plasmids F, RP4 and R388 are essential for conjugal transfer of plasmid DNA (Balzer et al, 1994). These proteins can functionally substitute for one another in the transfer of only a subset of conjugal plasmids (Cabezon et al, 1994;Hamilton et al, 2000). Two regions of the VirD4 homologues that correspond to motifs A and B of the Walker box have the highest sequence conservation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) can in part be identified by the presence of signature proteins associated with core functions of integration into and excision from the host genome (recombinase), replication as an extrachromosomal element (polymerase), and conjugation from the host to recipient cell (conjugation) (Ghinet et al, 2011). Analysis of the Glutamicibacter JB182 RUSTI region revealed homologs of each of these protein classes ( Figure 3A): a recombinase of the site-specific tyrosine recombinase XerD family (Ga0099663_102762) (Subramanya et al, 1997), a hexameric ATPase conjugation protein of the VirD4/TraG/TraD family (Ga0099663_102784) (Hamilton et al, 2000), and a homolog of the bi-functional primase-polymerase DNA replication protein family (Ga0099663_102766). Interestingly, Actinobacterial ICE systems typically use conjugation apparatus belonging to the SpoIIE/FtsK family, which allows transfer of double-stranded DNA (te Poele et al, 2008;Bordeleau et al, 2012).…”
Section: Iron Acquisition Hgtmentioning
confidence: 99%