Trimeric autotransporter adhesin

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Trimeric_autotransporter_adhesin an entity of type: Thing

In molecular biology, trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAAs), are proteins found on the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Bacteria use TAAs in order to infect their host cells via a process called cell adhesion. TAAs also go by another name, oligomeric coiled-coil adhesins, which is shortened to OCAs. In essence, they are virulence factors, factors that make the bacteria harmful and infective to the host organism. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Trimeric autotransporter adhesin
rdf:langString ESPR
rdf:langString YadA bacterial adhesin anchor domain
rdf:langString YadA head domain
rdf:langString YadA_stalk
xsd:integer 36373708
xsd:integer 1082981723
<second> 420.0 32400.0
rdf:langString Crystal structure of the collagen-binding domain of Yersinia adhesin YadA
rdf:langString The beta barrel structure found in the C-terminus of the bacterial adhesin anchor domain, YadA
rdf:langString IPR005594
rdf:langString IPR008635
rdf:langString IPR008640
rdf:langString PF03895
rdf:langString PF05658
rdf:langString PF05662
rdf:langString PF13018
rdf:langString CL0327
rdf:langString ESPR
rdf:langString YadA_anchor
rdf:langString YadA_head
rdf:langString YadA_stalk
rdf:langString In molecular biology, trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAAs), are proteins found on the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Bacteria use TAAs in order to infect their host cells via a process called cell adhesion. TAAs also go by another name, oligomeric coiled-coil adhesins, which is shortened to OCAs. In essence, they are virulence factors, factors that make the bacteria harmful and infective to the host organism. TAAs are just one of many methods bacteria use to infect their hosts, infection resulting in diseases such as pneumonia, sepsis, and meningitis. Most bacteria infect their host through a method named the secretion pathway. TAAs are part of the secretion pathway, to be more specific the type Vc secretion system. Trimeric autotransporter adhesins have a unique structure. The structure they hold is crucial to their function. They all appear to have a head-stalk-anchor structure. Each TAA is made up of three identical proteins, hence the name trimeric. Once the membrane anchor has been inserted into the outer membrane, the passenger domain passes through it into the host extracellular environment autonomously, hence the description of autotransporter. The head domain, once assembled, then adheres to an element of the host extracellular matrix, for example, collagen, fibronectin, etc.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 36926
xsd:string ESPR
xsd:string YadA_anchor
xsd:string YadA_head
xsd:string YadA_stalk

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