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. 2006 Feb;188(4):1389–1395. doi: 10.1128/JB.188.4.1389-1395.2006

FIG. 1.

FIG. 1.

Alignment of the deduced amino acid sequences of OhrRs from various bacteria. Xanthomonas, X. campestris (EMBL accession no. AAK62673); Caulobacter, C. crescentus (accession no. AAK22899); Brucella, B. melitensis (accession no. ALL53650), Vibrio, V. cholerae (accession no. AAF96901); Burkholderia, B. mallei (accession no. AAU46183); Erwinia, E. carotovora subsp. atroseptica (accession no. CAG76066); Acinetobacter, A. calcoaceticus (accession no. GAG69726); Sinorhizobium, S. meliloti (accession no. CAC45533); Agrobacterium, A. tumefaciens (accession no. AAL41860); Ralstonia, R. solanacearum (accession no. CAD18257); Pseudomonas, P. aeruginosa (accession no. AAG06237); Clostridium, C. acetobutylicum (accession no. AAK79536); Azotobacter, A. vinelandii (accession no. EAM06258); Bacillus, B. subtilis (accession no. CAA05594); Oceanobacillus, O. iheyensis (accession no. BAC15414); Streptomyces, S. coelicolor (accession no. CAB87337). Numbers indicate the positions of amino acid residues corresponding to X. campestris pv. phaseoli OhrR. Cysteine residues are shaded.