BAF

Barrier to autointegration factor
BAF
SMART accession number:SM01023
Description: Barrier-to-autointegration factor (BAF) is an essential protein that is highly conserved in metazoan evolution, and which may act as a DNA-bridging protein (PUBMED:12902403). BAF binds directly to double-stranded DNA, to transcription activators, and to inner nuclear membrane proteins, including lamin A filament proteins that anchor nuclear-pore complexes in place, and nuclear LEM-domain proteins that bind to laminins filaments and chromatin. New findings suggest that BAF has structural roles in nuclear assembly and chromatin organization, represses gene expression and might interlink chromatin structure, nuclear architecture and gene regulation in metazoans (PUBMED:15130582). BAF can be exploited by retroviruses to act as a host component of pre-integration complexes, which promote the integration of the retroviral DNA into the host chromosome by preventing autointegration of retroviral DNA (PUBMED:14645565). BAF might contribute to the assembly or activity of retroviral pre-integration complexes through direct binding to the retroviral proteins p55 Gag and matrix, as well as to DNA.
Interpro abstract (IPR004122):

Barrier-to-autointegration factor (BAF) is an essential protein that is highly conserved in metazoan evolution, and which may act as a DNA-bridging protein [ (PUBMED:12902403) ]. BAF binds directly to double-stranded DNA, to transcription activators, and to inner nuclear membrane proteins, including lamin A filament proteins that anchor nuclear-pore complexes in place, and nuclear LEM-domain proteins that bind to laminins filaments and chromatin. New findings suggest that BAF has structural roles in nuclear assembly and chromatin organisation, represses gene expression and might interlink chromatin structure, nuclear architecture and gene regulation in metazoans [ (PUBMED:15130582) ].

BAF can be exploited by retroviruses to act as a host component of pre-integration complexes, which promote the integration of the retroviral DNA into the host chromosome by preventing autointegration of retroviral DNA [ (PUBMED:14645565) ]. BAF might contribute to the assembly or activity of retroviral pre-integration complexes through direct binding to the retroviral proteins p55 Gag and matrix, as well as to DNA.

GO function:DNA binding (GO:0003677)
Family alignment:
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There are 787 BAF domains in 777 proteins in SMART's nrdb database.

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