Bacillus subtilis subsp. subtilis 168: BSU34890
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Entry
BSU34890 CDS
T00010
Symbol
hisH
Name
(RefSeq) imidazole glycerol phosphate synthase subunit HisH
KO
K02501
imidazole glycerol-phosphate synthase subunit HisH [EC:
4.3.2.10
]
Organism
bsu
Bacillus subtilis subsp. subtilis 168
Pathway
bsu00340
Histidine metabolism
bsu01100
Metabolic pathways
bsu01110
Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
bsu01230
Biosynthesis of amino acids
Module
bsu_M00026
Histidine biosynthesis, PRPP => histidine
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
bsu00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09105 Amino acid metabolism
00340 Histidine metabolism
BSU34890 (hisH)
Enzymes [BR:
bsu01000
]
4. Lyases
4.3 Carbon-nitrogen lyases
4.3.2 Amidine-lyases
4.3.2.10 imidazole glycerol-phosphate synthase
BSU34890 (hisH)
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Motif
Pfam:
GATase
GATase_3
SNO
DJ-1_PfpI
Peptidase_C26
GATase_5
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
936590
NCBI-ProteinID:
NP_391369
Pasteur:
BG12602
UniProt:
O34565
A0A6M3ZL17
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Position
complement(3585051..3585689)
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AA seq
212 aa
AA seq
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MIGVIDYGMGNLYSVSKALERVGVPYFVSEKPEELKEADAFILPGVGSFGDAMDNLGYTK
LDQLIHDMVSEGRLLLGICLGMQLLFEESEENGTASGLGLLKGKAVRLKAEDEKGNKLKV
PHMGWNRLSFHNESPLLTKTEQGYAYFVHSYYIDGMEENALLASADYGVRVPAVVGKRNV
FGAQFHPEKSSTVGMSILTQFTKMAAEQKVKK
NT seq
639 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgatcggcgtgatagattacggaatggggaatttatacagtgtctcaaaggcgcttgaa
cgtgtcggcgtgccgtattttgtttctgaaaagccggaggagctgaaagaagctgatgct
ttcattttgccgggagtcggttcatttggagacgcgatggacaatttgggctacacgaag
cttgatcaattgattcacgatatggtctcagagggaaggctgcttctcgggatctgcctc
ggcatgcagcttttatttgaagaaagcgaagaaaacggcaccgcttcaggactcgggctg
ttaaaaggaaaagcagtcaggctgaaagcagaagatgaaaaaggaaacaagctgaaggtt
ccgcatatgggctggaatcgtctttcttttcataatgaatctccgctgctgactaaaaca
gaacaaggctacgcttacttcgttcattcctattacattgacgggatggaggagaacgcg
cttctggcaagcgccgattatggtgtacgagtgcctgctgtagtcggaaaaagaaacgtc
ttcggcgcccaatttcatccggaaaaaagcagcacggtcggaatgtctattttaacccaa
tttacgaaaatggcagcagaacagaaggtgaaaaaatga
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