Gordonia sp. 135: GKZ92_06045
Help
Entry
GKZ92_06045 CDS
T06305
Symbol
pdxH
Name
(GenBank) pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate oxidase
KO
K00275
pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate oxidase [EC:
1.4.3.5
]
Organism
god
Gordonia sp. 135
Pathway
god00750
Vitamin B6 metabolism
god01100
Metabolic pathways
god01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
god01240
Biosynthesis of cofactors
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
god00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
00750 Vitamin B6 metabolism
GKZ92_06045 (pdxH)
Enzymes [BR:
god01000
]
1. Oxidoreductases
1.4 Acting on the CH-NH2 group of donors
1.4.3 With oxygen as acceptor
1.4.3.5 pyridoxal 5'-phosphate synthase
GKZ92_06045 (pdxH)
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Putative_PNPOx
PNP_phzG_C
Pyridox_oxase_2
Pyrid_ox_like
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
QGP87243
UniProt:
A0A6I5ZCN0
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
1322555..1323289
Genome browser
AA seq
244 aa
AA seq
DB search
MLEKPLDPIDLPNMRVGYGGGIPPNIGEGDRAAGADGIRENLDPSWLRGDPPWLDLFSVW
LKEALDARIAEPNAMVLGTADADGRPSTRTVLCKGVDANGVVFFTGYESDKGRHLADNPY
ASVTFPWIALERQVHFRGPVEHLSAEETQAYWELRPRGSQLSAAASDQSRPIGSRLELEQ
KAADLADRYGGFDAGDEIPVPSDWGGYRIEPVEVEFWQGRANRLHNRVRLTHVDHEWRIE
RLQP
NT seq
735 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
gtgttggagaaaccgctcgatccgattgatctgccgaacatgcgcgtcggctacggcgga
ggtattccgcccaacatcggagagggcgatcgcgcggcgggagcagacggaattcgcgag
aacctcgaccccagctggctccgcggcgacccgccgtggctcgacttgttcagtgtctgg
ctgaaggaagcgctcgacgcccggatcgccgagcccaacgcgatggtcctgggtaccgcc
gacgccgacggtcggccgtcgacccgcaccgtgctgtgcaagggtgtcgacgccaacggg
gtggtcttcttcaccggctacgagtcggacaaaggtcggcatctggccgacaatccctac
gcatccgtgacattcccgtggatcgcgttggagcgtcaggtccatttccgcggtcccgtc
gaacatctcagcgccgaggagacacaggcctactgggagctccggccgcgcggctcgcag
ttgtcggccgccgcgtcggatcagtcccggccgatcggcagccgcctcgaactcgaacag
aaggccgccgatctggccgaccggtacggcggattcgacgccggcgacgagatccccgtc
ccgtcggactggggtggctatcgcatcgagccggtggaggtcgagttctggcaggggcgg
gcgaaccgcctgcacaaccgggtgcgactcacccacgtcgaccacgaatggcgaatcgag
cggttgcagccctga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system