KEGG   Brucepastera parasyntrophica: K7I13_03835
Entry
K7I13_03835       CDS       T08309                                 
Name
(GenBank) LexA family transcriptional regulator
  KO
K01356  repressor LexA [EC:3.4.21.88]
Organism
bpaa  Brucepastera parasyntrophica
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:bpaa00001]
 09180 Brite Hierarchies
  09181 Protein families: metabolism
   01002 Peptidases and inhibitors [BR:bpaa01002]
    K7I13_03835
  09182 Protein families: genetic information processing
   03400 DNA repair and recombination proteins [BR:bpaa03400]
    K7I13_03835
Enzymes [BR:bpaa01000]
 3. Hydrolases
  3.4  Acting on peptide bonds (peptidases)
   3.4.21  Serine endopeptidases
    3.4.21.88  repressor LexA
     K7I13_03835
Peptidases and inhibitors [BR:bpaa01002]
 Serine peptidases
  Family S24: LexA family
   K7I13_03835
DNA repair and recombination proteins [BR:bpaa03400]
 Prokaryotic type
  TLS (translesion DNA synthesis) factors
   Other SOS response factors
    K7I13_03835
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: Peptidase_S24 HTH_3 HTH_31 HTH_19 P22_Cro HTH_26 MqsA_antitoxin HTH_24
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: ULQ60450
LinkDB
Position
792374..792970
AA seq 198 aa
MLSIRLKELRKKRKLTQVDLSKLLGVTQQAIAKWEAALSLPEPAAITRLAAFFDVSSDYL
LGITNSLLPAGAFSGIRIIGSVKAGYGGLADEEELGTAPAAVKDPEQYRYLVVKGDSMAP
FIREGDLALIRVQSTLQDGELGVFIYQGAEATLKKYRRKNDAVILEPFNDTYKAITIQGA
DLEQLIIFGKVVETHTRW
NT seq 597 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgctctcaataagactgaaagaactccgcaaaaaacgaaaactcacccaggttgatctg
tcaaagttgttaggtgtaacccagcaggcaatcgccaaatgggaagctgctctttccctc
cccgaaccggcggccataacccggctcgcggcctttttcgatgtcagctccgactacctt
ctgggaatcacaaattccctgctccccgcaggggccttctccgggatcaggattatcggt
tccgtcaaggctggatacggagggcttgccgacgaggaagaactggggacagctccggcg
gcagtaaaagatccggaacaataccgttatctggtggtcaagggagattctatggctcct
tttatccgggaaggcgatcttgccctgatcagagttcagtccactcttcaggacggcgag
ctgggtgtttttatatatcagggggctgaggctactctgaaaaaataccgccggaaaaac
gacgctgtcattctggaaccctttaatgatacttacaaggcaattaccattcagggggca
gatctggaacagctgattattttcggcaaggtcgtggaaacccacaccaggtggtaa

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