Cutibacterium acnes KCOM 1861 (= ChDC B594): RN83_07410
Help
Entry
RN83_07410 CDS
T04624
Name
(GenBank) cytochrome C peroxidase
KO
K06442
23S rRNA (cytidine1920-2'-O)/16S rRNA (cytidine1409-2'-O)-methyltransferase [EC:
2.1.1.226
2.1.1.227
]
Organism
cacn
Cutibacterium acnes KCOM 1861 (= ChDC B594)
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
cacn00001
]
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09182 Protein families: genetic information processing
03009 Ribosome biogenesis [BR:
cacn03009
]
RN83_07410
Enzymes [BR:
cacn01000
]
2. Transferases
2.1 Transferring one-carbon groups
2.1.1 Methyltransferases
2.1.1.226 23S rRNA (cytidine1920-2'-O)-methyltransferase
RN83_07410
2.1.1.227 16S rRNA (cytidine1409-2'-O)-methyltransferase
RN83_07410
Ribosome biogenesis [BR:
cacn03009
]
Prokaryotic type
rRNA modification factors
16S rRNA modification factors
RN83_07410
23S rRNA modification factors
RN83_07410
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
FtsJ
Methyltransf_25
Methyltransf_23
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ALD70822
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(1592709..1593329)
Genome browser
AA seq
206 aa
AA seq
DB search
MKVSTTDVLVADEEVWVSRAAHKLLGALDILGVQVPSRVLDAGASTGGFTQVVLSRGAKL
VHAVDVGHDQMSPMLRNDPRVIVHEGLNLRDLQPADLAVDGVIEPVDLVVGDVSFISLTM
ILEPISAVVSPDGLMLLLVKPQFEVGRKALGAHGVVTDPALRLQAIAGVMAAAVDLGWRM
RDECDSPLPGQDGNVEHFVLLERKGR
NT seq
621 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgaaggtgagcaccaccgacgtgctggttgccgacgaagaggtgtgggtgtctcgcgct
gcacacaaacttctaggtgccttggatatccttggcgtccaagtgccgtcaagagtactt
gatgctggtgcgtccaccggtgggttcacccaagttgtgctgtcacggggagccaaactt
gtgcatgccgtcgatgttggtcacgaccagatgtctccgatgctgcggaatgatccccgt
gtcattgttcatgaaggcttgaacttgcgtgatcttcagcctgcggacctggcggttgac
ggcgttattgagccggtggacctcgtggtcggagatgtctcttttatctccttgacgatg
atccttgaacccatttcagctgttgtcagcccagacggcctcatgctgttgctggtgaag
cctcaatttgaggttggtcgcaaggctttgggagcccatggcgttgtcacggaccctgcc
ctgcgcttgcaggccatcgcgggtgtcatggcagcagcggtagatctgggttggcgtatg
cgtgacgagtgcgatagcccgttgcccgggcaggatggaaacgttgagcacttcgtcttg
ctggaacgtaagggtcggtga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system