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Bacterial ice-nucleation proteins
Bacterial ice-nucleation proteins are a family of proteins that enable Gram-negative bacteria to promote nucleation of ice at relatively high temperatures (above −5 °C). These proteins are localised at the outer membrane surface and can cause frost damage to many plants. The primary structure of the proteins contains a highly repetitive domain that dominates the sequence. The domain comprises a number of 48-residue repeats, which themselves contain 3 blocks of 16 residues, the first 8 of which are identical. It is thought that the repetitive domain may be responsible for aligning water molecules in the seed crystal.
[.........48.residues.repeated.domain..........]
/ / | | \
AGYGSTxTagxxssli AGYGSTxTagxxsxlt AGYGSTxTaqxxsxlt
[16.residues...] [16.residues...] [16.residues...]
References
References
- (October 1990). "Detection of bacteria by transduction of ice nucleation genes". Trends in Biotechnology.
- (November 1993). "Bacterial ice nucleation: significance and molecular basis". FASEB Journal.
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