pfam01527, HTH_Tnp_1, Transposase. Transposase proteins are necessary for efficient DNA transposition. This family consists of various E. coli insertion elements and other bacterial transposases some of which are members of the IS3 family.
TIGR04547, putative_liporotein, MOLPALP family lipoprotein. Members of this family are surface lipoproteins, about 900 amino acids long on average, found only in the Mollicutes (Mycoplasma, Entomoplasma, Acholeplasma, Mesoplasma, Spiroplasma). Paralogs occur, such as MCAP_0360, MCAP_0361, and MCAP_0362 in Mycoplasma capricolum. This family shares significant N-terminal sequence similarity with STREFT (Secreted Thousand Residue Frequently Tandem), described by model TIGR04512; several members of the STREFT family have been misannotated as GnsA/GnsB family proteins. For proteins in this family, we suggest the name MOLPALP (Mollicutes Paralogous Lipoprotein) family lipoprotein [Cell envelope, Surface structures].
pfam02661, Fic, Fic/DOC family. This family consists of the Fic (filamentation induced by cAMP) protein and doc (death on curing). The Fic protein is involved in cell division and is suggested to be involved in the synthesis of PAB or folate, indicating that the Fic protein and cAMP are involved in a regulatory mechanism of cell division via folate metabolism. This family contains a central conserved motif HPFXXGNG in most members. The exact molecular function of these proteins is uncertain. P1 lysogens of Escherichia coli carry the prophage as a stable low copy number plasmid. The frequency with which viable cells cured of prophage are produced is about 10(-5) per cell per generation. A significant part of this remarkable stability can be attributed to a plasmid-encoded mechanism that causes death of cells that have lost P1. In other words, the lysogenic cells appear to be addicted to the presence of the prophage. The plasmid withdrawal response depends on a gene named doc (death on curing) that is represented by this family. Doc induces a reversible growth arrest of E. coli cells by targetting the protein synthesis machinery. Doc hosts the C-terminal domain of its antitoxin partner Phd (prevents host death) through fold complementation, a domain that is intrinsically disordered in solution but that folds into an alpha-helix on binding to Doc.This domain forms complexes with Phd antitoxins containing pfam02604.
pfam13673, Acetyltransf_10, Acetyltransferase (GNAT) domain. This family contains proteins with N-acetyltransferase functions such as Elp3-related proteins.
pfam01527, HTH_Tnp_1, Transposase. Transposase proteins are necessary for efficient DNA transposition. This family consists of various E. coli insertion elements and other bacterial transposases some of which are members of the IS3 family.
TIGR04547, putative_liporotein, MOLPALP family lipoprotein. Members of this family are surface lipoproteins, about 900 amino acids long on average, found only in the Mollicutes (Mycoplasma, Entomoplasma, Acholeplasma, Mesoplasma, Spiroplasma). Paralogs occur, such as MCAP_0360, MCAP_0361, and MCAP_0362 in Mycoplasma capricolum. This family shares significant N-terminal sequence similarity with STREFT (Secreted Thousand Residue Frequently Tandem), described by model TIGR04512; several members of the STREFT family have been misannotated as GnsA/GnsB family proteins. For proteins in this family, we suggest the name MOLPALP (Mollicutes Paralogous Lipoprotein) family lipoprotein [Cell envelope, Surface structures].
pfam02661, Fic, Fic/DOC family. This family consists of the Fic (filamentation induced by cAMP) protein and doc (death on curing). The Fic protein is involved in cell division and is suggested to be involved in the synthesis of PAB or folate, indicating that the Fic protein and cAMP are involved in a regulatory mechanism of cell division via folate metabolism. This family contains a central conserved motif HPFXXGNG in most members. The exact molecular function of these proteins is uncertain. P1 lysogens of Escherichia coli carry the prophage as a stable low copy number plasmid. The frequency with which viable cells cured of prophage are produced is about 10(-5) per cell per generation. A significant part of this remarkable stability can be attributed to a plasmid-encoded mechanism that causes death of cells that have lost P1. In other words, the lysogenic cells appear to be addicted to the presence of the prophage. The plasmid withdrawal response depends on a gene named doc (death on curing) that is represented by this family. Doc induces a reversible growth arrest of E. coli cells by targetting the protein synthesis machinery. Doc hosts the C-terminal domain of its antitoxin partner Phd (prevents host death) through fold complementation, a domain that is intrinsically disordered in solution but that folds into an alpha-helix on binding to Doc.This domain forms complexes with Phd antitoxins containing pfam02604.
pfam13673, Acetyltransf_10, Acetyltransferase (GNAT) domain. This family contains proteins with N-acetyltransferase functions such as Elp3-related proteins.
pfam01527, HTH_Tnp_1, Transposase. Transposase proteins are necessary for efficient DNA transposition. This family consists of various E. coli insertion elements and other bacterial transposases some of which are members of the IS3 family.
TIGR04547, putative_liporotein, MOLPALP family lipoprotein. Members of this family are surface lipoproteins, about 900 amino acids long on average, found only in the Mollicutes (Mycoplasma, Entomoplasma, Acholeplasma, Mesoplasma, Spiroplasma). Paralogs occur, such as MCAP_0360, MCAP_0361, and MCAP_0362 in Mycoplasma capricolum. This family shares significant N-terminal sequence similarity with STREFT (Secreted Thousand Residue Frequently Tandem), described by model TIGR04512; several members of the STREFT family have been misannotated as GnsA/GnsB family proteins. For proteins in this family, we suggest the name MOLPALP (Mollicutes Paralogous Lipoprotein) family lipoprotein [Cell envelope, Surface structures].
pfam02661, Fic, Fic/DOC family. This family consists of the Fic (filamentation induced by cAMP) protein and doc (death on curing). The Fic protein is involved in cell division and is suggested to be involved in the synthesis of PAB or folate, indicating that the Fic protein and cAMP are involved in a regulatory mechanism of cell division via folate metabolism. This family contains a central conserved motif HPFXXGNG in most members. The exact molecular function of these proteins is uncertain. P1 lysogens of Escherichia coli carry the prophage as a stable low copy number plasmid. The frequency with which viable cells cured of prophage are produced is about 10(-5) per cell per generation. A significant part of this remarkable stability can be attributed to a plasmid-encoded mechanism that causes death of cells that have lost P1. In other words, the lysogenic cells appear to be addicted to the presence of the prophage. The plasmid withdrawal response depends on a gene named doc (death on curing) that is represented by this family. Doc induces a reversible growth arrest of E. coli cells by targetting the protein synthesis machinery. Doc hosts the C-terminal domain of its antitoxin partner Phd (prevents host death) through fold complementation, a domain that is intrinsically disordered in solution but that folds into an alpha-helix on binding to Doc.This domain forms complexes with Phd antitoxins containing pfam02604.
pfam13673, Acetyltransf_10, Acetyltransferase (GNAT) domain. This family contains proteins with N-acetyltransferase functions such as Elp3-related proteins.