Oceanicoccus sagamiensis: BST96_15855
Help
Entry
BST96_15855 CDS
T04832
Name
(GenBank) enoyl-CoA hydratase
KO
K15866
2-(1,2-epoxy-1,2-dihydrophenyl)acetyl-CoA isomerase [EC:
5.3.3.18
]
Organism
osg
Oceanicoccus sagamiensis
Pathway
osg00360
Phenylalanine metabolism
osg01100
Metabolic pathways
osg01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
osg00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09105 Amino acid metabolism
00360 Phenylalanine metabolism
BST96_15855
Enzymes [BR:
osg01000
]
5. Isomerases
5.3 Intramolecular oxidoreductases
5.3.3 Transposing C=C bonds
5.3.3.18 2-(1,2-epoxy-1,2-dihydrophenyl)acetyl-CoA isomerase
BST96_15855
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
ECH_1
ECH_2
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ARN75456
UniProt:
A0A1X9ND16
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(3449003..3449791)
Genome browser
AA seq
262 aa
AA seq
DB search
MADFEALLFEKNDGVAKITLNRPDAANGINLQLAKEMMQAANAIDDDPSIRAVLITGSGK
LFCAGGDLKSMAGADSRSALLKEITFYLHGALSRLARNNAPVVVAVNGTAAGAGFSLAVA
GDLVLAAESAKFTMAYTAAGLTPDGSSSYYLPRLIGMRKTQELMITNRVLSAQEALDWGA
INRVVPNDELQAEAEALAKQLANGPTQAFGAVKKLLMTTFSNGFETQLDMEANFIASMTT
IHDGNEGINAFSEKRAPEFKGN
NT seq
789 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggctgactttgaagcactattattcgaaaaaaacgacggcgtagccaaaatcacccta
aaccgtcccgatgccgccaatggtatcaacttacaactggcaaaagaaatgatgcaggcg
gccaatgcgattgatgatgacccctctatcagggctgtattgattactggcagcggcaag
ctattctgcgccggtggtgatttaaagagcatggcgggggctgatagccgcagcgcactg
cttaaagagatcaccttttacctgcatggcgccctatcacgtctggcccgtaataatgcc
cccgtggtggttgcggtcaatggcaccgccgctggtgccggctttagcctggcggtagcc
ggggatttagtcttggcagccgagtcggccaaatttactatggcttataccgccgctggc
ctaacccctgatggtagctcctcttattacctgccccgtctgatcggcatgcgcaagacc
caggaactaatgattaccaatcgggtattaagcgctcaggaggctctggattggggcgct
atcaaccgtgttgtgcctaacgatgaacttcaggcagaagcagaagcactggccaaacaa
ctggctaacggccccacccaggcctttggagcggttaaaaagctgcttatgaccaccttt
agcaacggctttgaaacacaactggatatggaagctaactttatcgcctccatgaccacc
atccatgatggtaacgaaggcatcaatgcttttagtgagaaacgagcacctgaatttaaa
ggtaattaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system