AbstractWe have investigated the activation of FtsZ by monovalent cations. FtsZ polymerization was dependent on the concentrations of protein and monovalent salts, and was accompanied by the uptake of a single ion per monomer added. The affinity and the specificity for the cation were low. Potassium, ammonium, rubidium or sodium activated FtsZ to different extents. Electron microscopy showed that polymers formed with either rubidium, or potassium, were very similar, as were their nucleotide turnover rates. The GTPase activity was lower with rubidium than with potassium, indicating that nucleotide exchange is independent of nucleotide hydrolysis. Control of polymerization by binding of a low affinity cation might govern the dynamic behavior ...
© 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.. The cell division prote...
The polymerization of FtsZ is a finely regulated process that plays an essential role in the bacteri...
FtsZ, a tubulin homologue, forms a cytokinetic ring at the site of cell division in prokaryotes. The...
AbstractWe have investigated the activation of FtsZ by monovalent cations. FtsZ polymerization was d...
FtsZ polymerizes in a ring-like structure at mid cell to initiate cell division in Escherichia coli....
During bacterial cell division, the essential protein FtsZ assembles in the middle of the cell to fo...
The prokaryotic tubulin homologue FtsZ polymerizes in vitro in a nucleotide dependent fashion. Here ...
AbstractThe prokaryotic tubulin homologue FtsZ polymerizes in vitro in a nucleotide dependent fashio...
FtsZ polymerizes in a ring-like structure at mid cell to initiate cell division in <i>Escherichia co...
There is a growing body of evidence that bacterial cell division is an intricate coordinated process...
AbstractStable, more than 98% nucleotide-free apo-FtsZ was prepared from purified Methanococcus jann...
There is a growing body of evidence that bacterial cell division is an intricate coordinated process...
Bacteria and archaea usually divide symmetrically by formation of a septum in the middle of the cell...
To understand the polymerization dynamics of FtsZ, a bacterial cell division protein similar to tubu...
9 p.-8 fig.-2 tab.FtsZ is the first protein recruited to the bacterial division site, where it forms...
© 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.. The cell division prote...
The polymerization of FtsZ is a finely regulated process that plays an essential role in the bacteri...
FtsZ, a tubulin homologue, forms a cytokinetic ring at the site of cell division in prokaryotes. The...
AbstractWe have investigated the activation of FtsZ by monovalent cations. FtsZ polymerization was d...
FtsZ polymerizes in a ring-like structure at mid cell to initiate cell division in Escherichia coli....
During bacterial cell division, the essential protein FtsZ assembles in the middle of the cell to fo...
The prokaryotic tubulin homologue FtsZ polymerizes in vitro in a nucleotide dependent fashion. Here ...
AbstractThe prokaryotic tubulin homologue FtsZ polymerizes in vitro in a nucleotide dependent fashio...
FtsZ polymerizes in a ring-like structure at mid cell to initiate cell division in <i>Escherichia co...
There is a growing body of evidence that bacterial cell division is an intricate coordinated process...
AbstractStable, more than 98% nucleotide-free apo-FtsZ was prepared from purified Methanococcus jann...
There is a growing body of evidence that bacterial cell division is an intricate coordinated process...
Bacteria and archaea usually divide symmetrically by formation of a septum in the middle of the cell...
To understand the polymerization dynamics of FtsZ, a bacterial cell division protein similar to tubu...
9 p.-8 fig.-2 tab.FtsZ is the first protein recruited to the bacterial division site, where it forms...
© 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.. The cell division prote...
The polymerization of FtsZ is a finely regulated process that plays an essential role in the bacteri...
FtsZ, a tubulin homologue, forms a cytokinetic ring at the site of cell division in prokaryotes. The...