Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1944310 | Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes | 2013 | 18 Pages |
•52 families of established and putative holins have been identified.•Several of these comprise large superfamilies of related proteins.•Holin size and topology have been fairly well conserved within families.•Horizontal transfer of holin genes is reported, but less frequently than expected.•Results imply limited host ranges by phage over evolutionary time.
Holins are small “hole-forming” transmembrane proteins that mediate bacterial cell lysis during programmed cell death or following phage infection. We have identified fifty two families of established or putative holins and have included representative members of these proteins in the Transporter Classification Database (TCDB; www.tcdb.org). We have identified the organismal sources of members of these families, calculated their average protein sizes, estimated their topologies and determined their relative family sizes. Topological analyses suggest that these proteins can have 1, 2, 3 or 4 transmembrane α-helical segments (TMSs), and members of a single family are frequently, but not always, of a single topology. In one case, proteins of a family proved to have either 2 or 4 TMSs, and the latter arose by intragenic duplication of a primordial 2 TMS protein-encoding gene resembling the former. Using established statistical approaches, some of these families have been shown to be related by common descent. Seven superfamilies, including 21 of the 52 recognized families were identified. Conserved motif and Pfam analyses confirmed most superfamily assignments. These results serve to expand upon the scope of channel-forming bacterial holins.
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