KEGG   Vibrio cholerae O1 M66-2: VCM66_1302
Entry
VCM66_1302        CDS       T00891                                 
Symbol
maiA
Name
(GenBank) maleylacetoacetate isomerase
  KO
K01800  maleylacetoacetate isomerase [EC:5.2.1.2]
Organism
vcm  Vibrio cholerae O1 M66-2
Pathway
vcm00350  Tyrosine metabolism
vcm00643  Styrene degradation
vcm01100  Metabolic pathways
vcm01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
Module
vcm_M00044  Tyrosine degradation, tyrosine => homogentisate
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:vcm00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09105 Amino acid metabolism
   00350 Tyrosine metabolism
    VCM66_1302 (maiA)
  09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
   00643 Styrene degradation
    VCM66_1302 (maiA)
Enzymes [BR:vcm01000]
 5. Isomerases
  5.2  cis-trans-Isomerases
   5.2.1  cis-trans Isomerases (only sub-subclass identified to date)
    5.2.1.2  maleylacetoacetate isomerase
     VCM66_1302 (maiA)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: GST_N GST_N_3 GST_N_2 GST_C_3 GST_C GST_C_2
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: ACP05618
UniProt: C3LM42
LinkDB
Position
I:1392164..1392811
AA seq 215 aa
MMSLILYGYWRSSAAYRVRIALNIKQLVYESRAVHLSREGGEQHHAEFHRLNPSELIPVL
IDGELCLNQSLAIIEYLDETYPEPRLIPERGAERYQVKALALDIAADIHPINNLRILQYL
TAELGVADEEKNRWYRHWIDKGFQGLEEKLRHTAGEYCVGNRLSLVDVCLVPQVYNAERF
DLDMSRYPTLQQIAARLRALPAFAQAAPENQPDAC
NT seq 648 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
gtgatgagtttaattctctatggttattggcgttcgtcagccgcctatcgagtgcgtatt
gccctcaatattaaacagttggtttacgagtcccgtgccgtgcatcttagccgtgaagga
ggggagcagcatcatgccgagtttcatcgcctcaatcctagcgagttgattcctgtgctt
atcgatggtgagctctgcttgaatcaatcgctggcgattattgagtatttggatgaaacc
tatcccgaaccccgtttgatcccagagcgaggtgccgagcgttatcaggtgaaagcgtta
gcgttagacatcgcagcggatatccatccgatcaataacttgcggattttgcagtatctt
accgcggagcttggtgtggccgatgaagaaaaaaatcgttggtatcgccactggattgat
aaaggttttcaaggtttggaagagaaattgcgccatacggcaggggaatattgtgtgggt
aatcgcttgtctctggtcgatgtctgtttagtgcctcaagtttataacgctgagcgattt
gatctcgatatgagtcgttatcccaccttacagcagattgcagcaaggttacgtgctttg
cctgcgtttgcgcaggctgctccagaaaatcagcctgatgcttgttga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system