KEGG   Blastococcus saxobsidens: BLASA_4348
Entry
BLASA_4348        CDS       T01752                                 
Symbol
mutB3
Name
(GenBank) Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase small subunit
  KO
K01849  methylmalonyl-CoA mutase, C-terminal domain [EC:5.4.99.2]
Organism
bsd  Blastococcus saxobsidens
Pathway
bsd00280  Valine, leucine and isoleucine degradation
bsd00630  Glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism
bsd00640  Propanoate metabolism
bsd00720  Other carbon fixation pathways
bsd01100  Metabolic pathways
bsd01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
bsd01200  Carbon metabolism
Module
bsd_M00741  Propanoyl-CoA metabolism, propanoyl-CoA => succinyl-CoA
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:bsd00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09101 Carbohydrate metabolism
   00630 Glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism
    BLASA_4348 (mutB3)
   00640 Propanoate metabolism
    BLASA_4348 (mutB3)
  09102 Energy metabolism
   00720 Other carbon fixation pathways
    BLASA_4348 (mutB3)
  09105 Amino acid metabolism
   00280 Valine, leucine and isoleucine degradation
    BLASA_4348 (mutB3)
Enzymes [BR:bsd01000]
 5. Isomerases
  5.4  Intramolecular transferases
   5.4.99  Transferring other groups
    5.4.99.2  methylmalonyl-CoA mutase
     BLASA_4348 (mutB3)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: B12-binding PGM_PMM_I
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: CCG05168
UniProt: H6RNM0
LinkDB
Position
complement(4204368..4204787)
AA seq 139 aa
MSDVQRLRAILAKPGLDGHDRGAKVVARGLRDAGFEVIYTGLRQTPHAIAVAAMQENVDV
ICLSILSGAHVGICARLHQEQAALGTDVPVVVGGIIPDDDRPALKASGVRAIFGPGSGLP
DICREVRRIAEEYAGAPAE
NT seq 420 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
gtgagcgacgtccagcgcctgcgagccatcctggccaagccagggttggacggtcacgac
cgtggcgccaaggtcgtggctcggggcctgcgcgacgccggcttcgaggtcatctacacg
ggtctccgccagaccccccacgcgatcgccgtcgcggcgatgcaagagaacgtcgacgtc
atctgtctgtcgatcctctccggcgcccacgtaggcatctgcgcccggctgcaccaggag
caggccgcgctgggcacggacgtcccggtggtggtcggcggcatcatccccgacgacgac
cgcccggcgctcaaggcctccggtgtgcgcgccatattcgggccgggctcgggtctgcct
gacatctgccgcgaggtcaggcgcatcgcagaggagtacgccggtgccccggccgagtga

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