Corynebacterium hansenii: CHAN_09535
Help
Entry
CHAN_09535 CDS
T09360
Symbol
rnaSA
Name
(GenBank) Guanyl-specific ribonuclease Sa
KO
K01167
ribonuclease T1 [EC:
4.6.1.24
]
Organism
chan
Corynebacterium hansenii
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
chan00001
]
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09182 Protein families: genetic information processing
03019 Messenger RNA biogenesis [BR:
chan03019
]
CHAN_09535 (rnaSA)
03016 Transfer RNA biogenesis [BR:
chan03016
]
CHAN_09535 (rnaSA)
Enzymes [BR:
chan01000
]
4. Lyases
4.6 Phosphorus-oxygen lyases
4.6.1 Phosphorus-oxygen lyases (only sub-subclass identified to date)
4.6.1.24 ribonuclease T1
CHAN_09535 (rnaSA)
Messenger RNA biogenesis [BR:
chan03019
]
Prokaryotic type
Bacterial mRNA degradation factors
RNA degradosome components
Ribonucreases
CHAN_09535 (rnaSA)
Transfer RNA biogenesis [BR:
chan03016
]
Eukaryotic type
3'processing and CCA adding factors
3'processing factors
CHAN_09535 (rnaSA)
Prokaryotic type
CHAN_09535 (rnaSA)
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Ribonuclease
CFAP143
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
WJZ00510
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
2182656..2183228
Genome browser
AA seq
190 aa
AA seq
DB search
MSGMDGKKGKGLLAAGGALLLALAGAWFGIDGGTGAGNGSPGDAGSGGSGAGSGDSGSGA
GARPNDGPGKNGGGKTGAGQSRDGAEDGARGDECPIDTLPPQADEVVDRILTNQHHIHSP
HDGKHFGNYEGVLPRQKGDYYREYTVETPGLNHRGARRIVVGGGTEDDPDVWYYTDDHYG
SFCKIPDAED
NT seq
573 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgtcaggaatggacgggaagaagggcaaggggctcctcgccgcgggcggcgccctgctg
ctcgcattggccggtgcgtggttcggcatcgacggcggcaccggtgccgggaacggttcc
cccggcgacgcgggttcgggcggctccggcgcgggttcgggtgactccggctccggcgcg
ggcgcccgcccgaacgacggccccggcaagaatggcggcgggaaaaccggcgccgggcaa
tcacgcgatggcgcagaggacggcgcgcgcggggacgagtgccccatcgacacgctgccg
ccgcaggcggacgaggtcgtcgaccgcatcctgaccaaccagcaccacatccactcgccc
cacgacggcaagcacttcggcaactacgaaggcgttctgcctaggcagaagggcgactac
taccgcgagtacaccgtggagaccccggggctgaaccaccgcggggcccgtcgcatcgtc
gtcggcggcggcacggaagacgacccggacgtttggtactacaccgacgaccattacggg
tcgttctgcaagatccccgacgcggaggactga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system