BAH domain
In molecular biology, the BAH domain (bromo-adjacent homology) domain is found in proteins such as eukaryotic DNA (cytosine-5) methyltransferases, the origin recognition complex 1 (Orc1) proteins, Bromo adjacent homology domain containing 1 (BAHD1), as well as several proteins involved in transcriptional regulation. The BAH domain appears to act as a protein-protein interaction module specialised in gene silencing, as suggested for example by its interaction within yeast Orc1p with the silent information regulator Sir1p. The BAH domain might therefore play an important role by linking DNA methylation, replication and transcriptional regulation.[1]
BAH | |||||||||
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crystal structure of the n-terminal bah domain of orc1p | |||||||||
Identifiers | |||||||||
Symbol | BAH | ||||||||
Pfam | PF01426 | ||||||||
InterPro | IPR001025 | ||||||||
MEROPS | C89 | ||||||||
SCOP2 | 1m4z / SCOPe / SUPFAM | ||||||||
CDD | cd04370 | ||||||||
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References
- Callebaut I, Courvalin JC, Mornon JP (March 1999). "The BAH (bromo-adjacent homology) domain: a link between DNA methylation, replication and transcriptional regulation". FEBS Lett. 446 (1): 189–93. doi:10.1016/S0014-5793(99)00132-5. PMID 10100640. S2CID 20695486.
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