Bacillus toyonensis: Btoyo_1761
Help
Entry
Btoyo_1761 CDS
T02901
Name
(GenBank) Enoyl-CoA hydratase
KO
K13767
enoyl-CoA hydratase [EC:
4.2.1.17
]
Organism
bty
Bacillus toyonensis
Pathway
bty00071
Fatty acid degradation
bty00362
Benzoate degradation
bty01100
Metabolic pathways
bty01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
bty01212
Fatty acid metabolism
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
bty00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09103 Lipid metabolism
00071 Fatty acid degradation
Btoyo_1761
09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
00362 Benzoate degradation
Btoyo_1761
Enzymes [BR:
bty01000
]
4. Lyases
4.2 Carbon-oxygen lyases
4.2.1 Hydro-lyases
4.2.1.17 enoyl-CoA hydratase
Btoyo_1761
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
ECH_1
ECH_2
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AHA07763
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(1725420..1726196)
Genome browser
AA seq
258 aa
AA seq
DB search
MLKFLSVRVEDHIAVATLNHGPANAMSSQVMHDVTELIDQVEKDDNIRVVVIHGEGRFFS
AGADIKEFTSVTEAKQATELAQLGQVTFERVEKCSKPVIAAIHGAALGGGLEFAMSCHMR
FVTESAKLGLPELTLGLIPGFAGTQRLPRYVGKAKACEMMLTSTPITGAEALKWGLVNGV
FSEETLLDDTLKVAKQIAGKSLATTRAVLELLQTTKSSHYYEGVQREAQIFGEVFTSEDG
REGVAAFLEKRKPSFSGR
NT seq
777 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgttgaaattcctatctgtaagagttgaagaccatattgcggtggcgacgttaaatcac
gggccagcgaatgcgatgtcttcacaagttatgcatgacgttactgagttaattgatcaa
gtggagaaggatgataacattcgtgttgttgttattcacggtgaagggcgcttcttctca
gctggagcagatattaaagaatttacatctgttactgaagcgaagcaagcgacagaatta
gcacagcttggacaagttacatttgagcgtgttgaaaaatgttcaaaaccagttatcgcg
gcaattcatggagcggcacttggcggcggccttgagtttgctatgtcttgccacatgcgc
tttgtaactgaaagtgcaaaacttggtttacctgaattaacacttggattaattcctggt
tttgcaggtacacagcgcttaccacgttatgttgggaaagcgaaagcttgtgaaatgatg
ttaacgagtacaccaattactggtgcagaagcattaaaatggggacttgttaacggagtg
ttttctgaagaaacacttttagacgatacacttaaagttgcaaaacaaattgctggaaaa
agtctagcaacaactcgtgctgtgttagagttattgcaaacgacaaaatcgtctcattat
tacgaaggtgtacagcgcgaagctcaaatcttcggtgaagtatttacgagtgaagatgga
agagaaggtgtagcagcgtttttagaaaaacgtaagccttcgtttagtggtaggtag
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system