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Volume 6, Number 2—April 2000
Synopsis

The bdr Gene Families of the Lyme Disease and Relapsing Fever Spirochetes: Potential Influence on Biology, Pathogenesis, and Evolution

David M. Roberts*, Jason A Carlyon†, Michael Theisen, and Richard T. Marconi*Comments to Author 
Author affiliations: *Medical College of Virginia at Virginia Commonwealth University, School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia, USA; †Yale School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA; ‡Statens Serum Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark

Main Article

Figure 3

Key features and putative functional domains of the Bdr proteins. The schematic depicts a prototype Bdr protein with the characteristics of each domain indicated. The abbreviation, ID%, is for percentage amino acid identity at either the inter- or intra-family level as indicated in the figure. Standard amino acid abbreviations are used in the figure to denote the conserved C-terminal lysine (K) or asparagine (N) residues, which are thought to be exposed in the periplasm and the cytoplasmically l

Figure 3. Key features and putative functional domains of the Bdr proteins. The schematic depicts a prototype Bdr protein with the characteristics of each domain indicated. The abbreviation, ID%, is for percentage amino acid identity at either the inter- or intra-family level as indicated in the figure. Standard amino acid abbreviations are used in the figure to denote the conserved C-terminal lysine (K) or asparagine (N) residues, which are thought to be exposed in the periplasm and the cytoplasmically located core tripeptide of the repeat motif (lysine-isoleucine-aspartic acid; KID).

Main Article

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