AI Article Synopsis

  • DivIVA, GpsB, FilP, and Scy play key roles in bacterial cell division and interact with each other, but their exact molecular functions are still not well understood.
  • Despite variations across different bacteria, they share a conserved N-terminal sequence motif linked to an evolutionary origin, which we define as the DivIVA-like domain.
  • Our research identifies a new family of proteins that have multiple copies of this domain, suggesting a different structural assembly and potential new functions in the cell division process.

Article Abstract

DivIVA, GpsB, FilP, and Scy are all involved in bacterial cell division. They have been reported to interact with each other, and although they have been the subject of considerable research interest, not much is known about the molecular basis for their biological activity. Although they show great variability in taxonomic occurrence, phenotypic profile, and molecular properties, we find that they nevertheless share a conserved N-terminal sequence motif, which points to a common evolutionary origin. The motif always occurs N-terminally to a coiled-coil helix that mediates dimerization. We define the motif and coiled coil jointly as a new domain, which we name DivIVA-like. In a large-scale survey of this domain in the protein sequence database, we identify a new family of proteins potentially involved in cell division, whose members, unlike all other DivIVA-like proteins, have between 2 and 8 copies of the domain in tandem. AlphaFold models indicate that the domains in these proteins assemble within a single chain, therefore not mediating dimerization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9858780PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0273136PLOS

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