DivIVA
- Description: cell-division initiation protein (septum placement)
Gene name | divIVA |
Synonyms | ylmJ |
Essential | no |
Product | cell-division initiation protein |
Function | septum placement |
MW, pI | 19 kDa, 4.846 |
Gene length, protein length | 492 bp, 164 aa |
Immediate neighbours | ylmH, ileS |
Get the DNA and protein sequences (Barbe et al., 2009) | |
Genetic context This image was kindly provided by SubtiList
|
Contents
The gene
Basic information
- Coordinates:
Phenotypes of a mutant
Deletion of divIVA leads to filamentation and polar divisions that cause a minicell phenotype. A divIVA mutant has a severe sporulation defect.
Database entries
- DBTBS entry: [1]
- SubtiList entry: [2]
Additional information
The protein
Basic information/ Evolution
- Catalyzed reaction/ biological activity: DivIVA is required for polar localisation of MinCD via MinJ. It also recruits RacA to the distal pole of the prespore.
- Protein family: gpsB family (according to Swiss-Prot)
- Paralogous protein(s): GpsB
Extended information on the protein
- Kinetic information:
- Domains:
- Modification:
- Cofactor(s):
- Effectors of protein activity:
- Localization: cytoplasm (according to Swiss-Prot)
Database entries
- Structure:
- Swiss prot entry: P71021
- KEGG entry: BSU15420
- E.C. number:
Additional information
Expression and regulation
- Operon: one gene cistron
- Regulation:
- Regulatory mechanism:
- Additional information:
Biological materials
- Mutant:
- Expression vector:
- lacZ fusion:
- GFP fusion:
- two-hybrid system:
- Antibody:
Labs working on this gene/protein
Tony Wilkinson, York University, U.K. homepage
Imrich Barak, Slovak Academy of Science, Bratislava, Slovakia homepage
Your additional remarks
References
Pamela Gamba, Jan-Willem Veening, Nigel J Saunders, Leendert W Hamoen, Richard A Daniel
Two-step assembly dynamics of the Bacillus subtilis divisome.
J Bacteriol: 2009, 191(13);4186-94
[PubMed:19429628]
[WorldCat.org]
[DOI]
(I p)
D H Edwards, J Errington
The Bacillus subtilis DivIVA protein targets to the division septum and controls the site specificity of cell division.
Mol Microbiol: 1997, 24(5);905-15
[PubMed:9219999]
[WorldCat.org]
[DOI]
(P p)