transcription termination factor NusA; This model describes NusA, or N utilization substance ...
6-343
1.43e-154
transcription termination factor NusA; This model describes NusA, or N utilization substance protein A, a bacterial transcription termination factor. It binds to RNA polymerase alpha subunit and promotes termination at certain RNA hairpin structures. It is named for the interaction in E. coli of phage lambda antitermination protein N with the N-utilization substance, consisting of NusA, NusB, NusE (ribosomal protein S10), and nusG. This model represents a region of NusA shared in all bacterial forms, and including an S1 (pfam00575) and a KH (pfam00013) RNA binding domains. Proteobacterial forms have an additional C-terminal region, not included in this model, with two repeats of 50-residue domain rich in acidic amino acids. [Transcription, Transcription factors]
:
Pssm-ID: 273893 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 341 Bit Score: 442.85 E-value: 1.43e-154
transcription termination factor NusA; This model describes NusA, or N utilization substance ...
6-343
1.43e-154
transcription termination factor NusA; This model describes NusA, or N utilization substance protein A, a bacterial transcription termination factor. It binds to RNA polymerase alpha subunit and promotes termination at certain RNA hairpin structures. It is named for the interaction in E. coli of phage lambda antitermination protein N with the N-utilization substance, consisting of NusA, NusB, NusE (ribosomal protein S10), and nusG. This model represents a region of NusA shared in all bacterial forms, and including an S1 (pfam00575) and a KH (pfam00013) RNA binding domains. Proteobacterial forms have an additional C-terminal region, not included in this model, with two repeats of 50-residue domain rich in acidic amino acids. [Transcription, Transcription factors]
Pssm-ID: 273893 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 341 Bit Score: 442.85 E-value: 1.43e-154
first type II K-homology (KH) RNA-binding domain found in transcription termination ...
200-275
2.19e-34
first type II K-homology (KH) RNA-binding domain found in transcription termination/antitermination protein NusA and similar proteins; NusA, also called N utilization substance protein A or transcription termination/antitermination L factor, is an essential multifunctional transcription elongation factor that participates in both transcription termination and antitermination. NusA anti-termination function plays an important role in the expression of ribosomal rrn operons. During transcription of many other genes, NusA-induced RNA polymerase pausing provides a mechanism for synchronizing transcription and translation. In prokaryotes, the N-terminal RNA polymerase-binding domain (NTD) is connected through a flexible hinge helix to three globular domains, the S1 and two K-homology (KH), KH1 and KH2. The KH domains of NusA belong to the type II KH RNA-binding domain superfamily. This model corresponds to the first KH domain of NusA and similar proteins.
Pssm-ID: 411779 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 76 Bit Score: 123.41 E-value: 2.19e-34
transcription termination factor NusA; This model describes NusA, or N utilization substance ...
6-343
1.43e-154
transcription termination factor NusA; This model describes NusA, or N utilization substance protein A, a bacterial transcription termination factor. It binds to RNA polymerase alpha subunit and promotes termination at certain RNA hairpin structures. It is named for the interaction in E. coli of phage lambda antitermination protein N with the N-utilization substance, consisting of NusA, NusB, NusE (ribosomal protein S10), and nusG. This model represents a region of NusA shared in all bacterial forms, and including an S1 (pfam00575) and a KH (pfam00013) RNA binding domains. Proteobacterial forms have an additional C-terminal region, not included in this model, with two repeats of 50-residue domain rich in acidic amino acids. [Transcription, Transcription factors]
Pssm-ID: 273893 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 341 Bit Score: 442.85 E-value: 1.43e-154
first type II K-homology (KH) RNA-binding domain found in transcription termination ...
200-275
2.19e-34
first type II K-homology (KH) RNA-binding domain found in transcription termination/antitermination protein NusA and similar proteins; NusA, also called N utilization substance protein A or transcription termination/antitermination L factor, is an essential multifunctional transcription elongation factor that participates in both transcription termination and antitermination. NusA anti-termination function plays an important role in the expression of ribosomal rrn operons. During transcription of many other genes, NusA-induced RNA polymerase pausing provides a mechanism for synchronizing transcription and translation. In prokaryotes, the N-terminal RNA polymerase-binding domain (NTD) is connected through a flexible hinge helix to three globular domains, the S1 and two K-homology (KH), KH1 and KH2. The KH domains of NusA belong to the type II KH RNA-binding domain superfamily. This model corresponds to the first KH domain of NusA and similar proteins.
Pssm-ID: 411779 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 76 Bit Score: 123.41 E-value: 2.19e-34
second type II K-homology (KH) RNA-binding domain found in transcription termination ...
278-339
7.17e-23
second type II K-homology (KH) RNA-binding domain found in transcription termination/antitermination protein NusA and similar proteins; NusA, also called N utilization substance protein A or transcription termination/antitermination L factor, is an essential multifunctional transcription elongation factor that participates in both transcription termination and antitermination. NusA anti-termination function plays an important role in the expression of ribosomal rrn operons. During transcription of many other genes, NusA-induced RNA polymerase pausing provides a mechanism for synchronizing transcription and translation. In prokaryotes, the N-terminal RNA polymerase-binding domain (NTD) is connected through a flexible hinge helix to three globular domains, the S1 and two K-homology, KH1 and KH2. The K-homology (KH) domains of NusA belong to the type II KH RNA-binding domain superfamily. This model corresponds to the second KH domain of NusA and similar proteins.
Pssm-ID: 411786 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 61 Bit Score: 91.44 E-value: 7.17e-23
S1_NusA: N-utilizing substance A protein (NusA), S1-like RNA-binding domain. S1-like ...
130-198
3.26e-21
S1_NusA: N-utilizing substance A protein (NusA), S1-like RNA-binding domain. S1-like RNA-binding domains are found in a wide variety of RNA-associated proteins. NusA is a transcription elongation factor containing an N-terminal catalytic domain and three RNA binding domains (RBD's). The RBD's include one S1 domain and two KH domains that form an RNA binding surface. DNA transcription by RNA polymerase (RNAP) includes three phases - initiation, elongation, and termination. During initiation, sigma factors bind RNAP and target RNAP to specific promoters. During elongation, N-utilization substances (NusA, B, E, and G) replace sigma factors and regulate pausing, termination, and antitermination. NusA is cold-shock-inducible.
Pssm-ID: 239902 [Multi-domain] Cd Length: 67 Bit Score: 87.11 E-value: 3.26e-21
NusA family KH domain protein, archaeal; This model represents a family of archaeal proteins ...
247-339
2.23e-11
NusA family KH domain protein, archaeal; This model represents a family of archaeal proteins found in a single copy per genome. It contains two KH domains (pfam00013) and is most closely related to the central region bacterial NusA, a transcription termination factor named for its iteraction with phage lambda protein N in E. coli. The proteins required for antitermination by N include NusA, NusB, nusE (ribosomal protein S10), and nusG. This system, on the whole, appears not to be present in the Archaea.
Pssm-ID: 273892 Cd Length: 141 Bit Score: 61.66 E-value: 2.23e-11
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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