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Structural Genomics Centers for Infectious Diseases

NIAID Structure of the Month

November 2009: Vibrio cholerae toxin

B. pseudomallei enzyme
The Center for Structural Genomics of Infectious Diseases has determined this 3-D enzyme structure from a Vibrio cholerae toxin.

This month's highlight is from a Vibrio cholerae toxin. The gastrointestinal pathogen V. cholerae is the bacteria responsible for causing cholera in humans.

Its Multifunctional Autoprocessing Repeats-in-ToXin toxin (MARTX) is related to other bacterial toxins, including those produced by at least 9 different Gram-negative bacteria, such as emerging hospital-acquired infections due to Clostridium difficile

Information for researchers about the toxin protease structure can be found at the CSGID structure summary.

Past Features


Contact

Valentina Di Francesco
Bioinformatics Program Director
Email: vdifrancesco@niaid.nih.gov

Highlight


NIAID Structure of the Month - Nov 2009 

Related Links

UVA Researchers Determine the 3-D Structure of Anthrax Protein (Non-government web site)

CSGID Determines the Structure of 100 Proteins (Non-government web site)

SSGCID Solves 100th Structure, Providing New Information About Infectious Diseases,  (Non-government web site - PDF)



Contact

Valentina Di Francesco
Bioinformatics Program Director
Email: vdifrancesco@niaid.nih.gov

Highlight


NIAID Structure of the Month - Nov 2009 

Related Links

UVA Researchers Determine the 3-D Structure of Anthrax Protein (Non-government web site)

CSGID Determines the Structure of 100 Proteins (Non-government web site)

SSGCID Solves 100th Structure, Providing New Information About Infectious Diseases,  (Non-government web site - PDF)