Brucella suis 1330: BS1330_II0640
Help
Entry
BS1330_II0640 CDS
T02103
Symbol
pcaG
Name
(GenBank) protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase, alpha subunit
KO
K00448
protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase, alpha subunit [EC:
1.13.11.3
]
Organism
bsi
Brucella suis 1330
Pathway
bsi00362
Benzoate degradation
bsi01100
Metabolic pathways
bsi01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
bsi01220
Degradation of aromatic compounds
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
bsi00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
00362 Benzoate degradation
BS1330_II0640 (pcaG)
00624 Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon degradation
BS1330_II0640 (pcaG)
Enzymes [BR:
bsi01000
]
1. Oxidoreductases
1.13 Acting on single donors with incorporation of molecular oxygen (oxygenases)
1.13.11 With incorporation of two atoms of oxygen
1.13.11.3 protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase
BS1330_II0640 (pcaG)
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Dioxygenase_C
CarboxypepD_reg
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AEM20111
UniProt:
A0A0H3GFE9
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
II:626812..627429
Genome browser
AA seq
205 aa
AA seq
DB search
MVQPLGYLKETASQTAGPYVHIGLTPNFVGINGVFAEDLGTGPLYNDKAHGERITIKGRV
IDGMGAPLRDALVEIWQADAAGLYNSPSESRGKADPHFRGWGRCPSNMETGEFIFETIKP
GRVPFRDGRLMAPHVTLWIVARGINLGLQTRMYFSDEEAANAEDPVLARIEHRMRVPTLI
GQREGDVYHFDIHLQGEKETVFFDI
NT seq
618 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggtacagccgctcggttatctcaaggagaccgcttcccagacagccggtccttacgtc
catatcggccttacgcccaatttcgtcggcattaacggagtttttgcagaagatctgggt
acaggtccgctttataacgacaaggcgcatggcgaacgcatcactatcaaggggcgcgtt
atcgacggcatgggcgcgccgctgcgcgatgcgctggtggaaatctggcaggccgatgct
gccgggctctataacagcccgagcgaaagccgtggcaaggccgatccgcattttcgtggc
tggggccgctgccccagcaatatggaaacgggcgaattcatcttcgagacgatcaagccc
ggccgcgttcccttccgggacgggcggctcatggcgccacatgtaaccttgtggatcgta
gcgcgcggcattaacctcggcctgcaaacgcggatgtatttttccgacgaagaagccgcc
aatgccgaagatccggtattggcgcgcatagagcatcgtatgcgcgtgccaaccttgatc
ggccagcgcgagggcgacgtctatcacttcgatatccaccttcagggcgaaaaagaaacg
gtctttttcgatatttaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system