DNA gyrase subunit B (GyrB) is the ATPase subunit of DNA gyrase, which is a type II topoisomerase that negatively supercoils closed circular double-stranded (ds) DNA in an ATP-dependent manner to modulate DNA topology and maintain chromosomes in an underwound state; may be partial
DNA gyrase, B subunit; This model describes the common type II DNA topoisomerase (DNA gyrase). ...
1-322
4.02e-160
DNA gyrase, B subunit; This model describes the common type II DNA topoisomerase (DNA gyrase). Two apparently independently arising families, one in the Proteobacteria and one in Gram-positive lineages, are both designated toposisomerase IV. Proteins scoring above the noise cutoff for this model and below the trusted cutoff for topoisomerase IV models probably should be designated GyrB. [DNA metabolism, DNA replication, recombination, and repair]
Pssm-ID: 273421 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 654 Bit Score: 461.82 E-value: 4.02e-160
TopoIIA_Trans_DNA_gyrase: Transducer domain, having a ribosomal S5 domain 2-like fold, of the ...
119-276
5.53e-74
TopoIIA_Trans_DNA_gyrase: Transducer domain, having a ribosomal S5 domain 2-like fold, of the type found in proteins of the type IIA family of DNA topoisomerases similar to the B subunits of E. coli DNA gyrase and E. coli Topoisomerase IV which are heterodimers composed of two subunits. The type IIA enzymes are the predominant form of topoisomerase and are found in some bacteriophages, viruses and archaea, and in all bacteria and eukaryotes. All type IIA topoisomerases are related to each other at amino acid sequence level, though their oligomeric organization sometimes differs. TopoIIA enzymes cut both strands of the duplex DNA to remove (relax) both positive and negative supercoils in DNA. These enzymes covalently attach to the 5' ends of the cut DNA, separate the free ends of the cleaved strands, pass another region of the duplex through this gap, then rejoin the ends. TopoIIA enzymes also catenate/ decatenate duplex rings. E.coli DNA gyrase is a heterodimer composed of two subunits. E. coli DNA gyrase B subunit is known to be important in nucleotide hydrolysis and the transduction of structural signals from ATP-binding site to the DNA breakage/reunion regions of the enzymes.
Pssm-ID: 238419 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 172 Bit Score: 225.13 E-value: 5.53e-74
DNA gyrase B; This family represents the second domain of DNA gyrase B which has a ribosomal ...
120-276
1.95e-61
DNA gyrase B; This family represents the second domain of DNA gyrase B which has a ribosomal S5 domain 2-like fold. This family is structurally related to PF01119.
Pssm-ID: 425522 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 173 Bit Score: 193.22 E-value: 1.95e-61
DNA gyrase, B subunit; This model describes the common type II DNA topoisomerase (DNA gyrase). ...
1-322
4.02e-160
DNA gyrase, B subunit; This model describes the common type II DNA topoisomerase (DNA gyrase). Two apparently independently arising families, one in the Proteobacteria and one in Gram-positive lineages, are both designated toposisomerase IV. Proteins scoring above the noise cutoff for this model and below the trusted cutoff for topoisomerase IV models probably should be designated GyrB. [DNA metabolism, DNA replication, recombination, and repair]
Pssm-ID: 273421 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 654 Bit Score: 461.82 E-value: 4.02e-160
TopoIIA_Trans_DNA_gyrase: Transducer domain, having a ribosomal S5 domain 2-like fold, of the ...
119-276
5.53e-74
TopoIIA_Trans_DNA_gyrase: Transducer domain, having a ribosomal S5 domain 2-like fold, of the type found in proteins of the type IIA family of DNA topoisomerases similar to the B subunits of E. coli DNA gyrase and E. coli Topoisomerase IV which are heterodimers composed of two subunits. The type IIA enzymes are the predominant form of topoisomerase and are found in some bacteriophages, viruses and archaea, and in all bacteria and eukaryotes. All type IIA topoisomerases are related to each other at amino acid sequence level, though their oligomeric organization sometimes differs. TopoIIA enzymes cut both strands of the duplex DNA to remove (relax) both positive and negative supercoils in DNA. These enzymes covalently attach to the 5' ends of the cut DNA, separate the free ends of the cleaved strands, pass another region of the duplex through this gap, then rejoin the ends. TopoIIA enzymes also catenate/ decatenate duplex rings. E.coli DNA gyrase is a heterodimer composed of two subunits. E. coli DNA gyrase B subunit is known to be important in nucleotide hydrolysis and the transduction of structural signals from ATP-binding site to the DNA breakage/reunion regions of the enzymes.
Pssm-ID: 238419 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 172 Bit Score: 225.13 E-value: 5.53e-74
DNA gyrase B; This family represents the second domain of DNA gyrase B which has a ribosomal ...
120-276
1.95e-61
DNA gyrase B; This family represents the second domain of DNA gyrase B which has a ribosomal S5 domain 2-like fold. This family is structurally related to PF01119.
Pssm-ID: 425522 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 173 Bit Score: 193.22 E-value: 1.95e-61
Histidine kinase-like ATPase domain of the B subunit of DNA gyrase; This family includes ...
1-115
5.97e-50
Histidine kinase-like ATPase domain of the B subunit of DNA gyrase; This family includes histidine kinase-like ATPase domain of the B subunit of DNA gyrase. Bacterial DNA gyrase is a type II topoisomerase (type II as it transiently cleaves both strands of DNA) which catalyzes the introduction of negative supercoils into DNA, possibly by a mechanism in which one segment of the double-stranded DNA substrate is passed through a transient break in a second segment. It consists of GyrA and GyrB subunits in an A2B2 stoichiometry; GyrA subunits catalyze strand-breakage and reunion reactions, and GyrB subunits hydrolyze ATP. DNA gyrase is found in bacteria, plants and archaea, but as it is absent in humans it is a possible drug target for the treatment of bacterial and parasite infections.
Pssm-ID: 340405 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 180 Bit Score: 164.25 E-value: 5.97e-50
DNA topoisomerase IV, B subunit, proteobacterial; Operationally, topoisomerase IV is a type II ...
1-322
3.34e-47
DNA topoisomerase IV, B subunit, proteobacterial; Operationally, topoisomerase IV is a type II topoisomerase required for the decatenation of chromosome segregation. Not every bacterium has both a topo II and a topo IV. The topo IV families of the Gram-positive bacteria and the Gram-negative bacteria appear not to represent a single clade among the type II topoisomerases, and are represented by separate models for this reason. This protein is active as an alpha(2)beta(2) heterotetramer. [DNA metabolism, DNA replication, recombination, and repair]
Pssm-ID: 130127 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 625 Bit Score: 167.79 E-value: 3.34e-47
MutL_Trans: transducer domain, having a ribosomal S5 domain 2-like fold, conserved in the ...
121-240
6.75e-16
MutL_Trans: transducer domain, having a ribosomal S5 domain 2-like fold, conserved in the C-terminal domain of type II DNA topoisomerases (Topo II) and DNA mismatch repair (MutL/MLH1/PMS2) proteins. This transducer domain is homologous to the second domain of the DNA gyrase B subunit, which is known to be important in nucleotide hydrolysis and the transduction of structural signals from ATP-binding site to the DNA breakage/reunion regions of the enzymes. The GyrB dimerizes in response to ATP binding, and is homologous to the N-terminal half of eukaryotic Topo II and the ATPase fragment of MutL. Type II DNA topoisomerases catalyze the ATP-dependent transport of one DNA duplex through another, in the process generating transient double strand breaks via covalent attachments to both DNA strands at the 5' positions. Included in this group are proteins similar to human MLH1 and PMS2. MLH1 forms a heterodimer with PMS2 which functions in meiosis and in DNA mismatch repair (MMR). Cells lacking either hMLH1 or hPMS2 have a strong mutator phenotype and display microsatellite instability (MSI). Mutation in hMLH1 accounts for a large fraction of Lynch syndrome (HNPCC) families.
Pssm-ID: 238202 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 107 Bit Score: 72.29 E-value: 6.75e-16
Database: CDSEARCH/cdd Low complexity filter: no Composition Based Adjustment: yes E-value threshold: 0.01
References:
Wang J et al. (2023), "The conserved domain database in 2023", Nucleic Acids Res.51(D)384-8.
Lu S et al. (2020), "The conserved domain database in 2020", Nucleic Acids Res.48(D)265-8.
Marchler-Bauer A et al. (2017), "CDD/SPARCLE: functional classification of proteins via subfamily domain architectures.", Nucleic Acids Res.45(D)200-3.
of the residues that compose this conserved feature have been mapped to the query sequence.
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