Clostridium saccharolyticum WM1: Closa_3848
Help
Entry
Closa_3848 CDS
T01288
Name
(GenBank) metal dependent phosphohydrolase
KO
K01139
GTP diphosphokinase / guanosine-3',5'-bis(diphosphate) 3'-diphosphatase [EC:
2.7.6.5
3.1.7.2
]
Organism
csh
Clostridium saccharolyticum WM1
Pathway
csh00230
Purine metabolism
csh01100
Metabolic pathways
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
csh00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09104 Nucleotide metabolism
00230 Purine metabolism
Closa_3848
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09182 Protein families: genetic information processing
03009 Ribosome biogenesis [BR:
csh03009
]
Closa_3848
Enzymes [BR:
csh01000
]
2. Transferases
2.7 Transferring phosphorus-containing groups
2.7.6 Diphosphotransferases
2.7.6.5 GTP diphosphokinase
Closa_3848
3. Hydrolases
3.1 Acting on ester bonds
3.1.7 Diphosphoric-monoester hydrolases
3.1.7.2 guanosine-3',5'-bis(diphosphate) 3'-diphosphatase
Closa_3848
Ribosome biogenesis [BR:
csh03009
]
Prokaryotic type
Other maturation factors
Closa_3848
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
HD_4
HD
Phage_cap_E
SWI-SNF_Ssr4_C
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ADL06366
UniProt:
D9R0D3
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(4171667..4172197)
Genome browser
AA seq
176 aa
AA seq
DB search
MVEKAVAFAIKSHEGTFRKGTKIPYIVHPLETAVIVALMVTDEEMICAALLHDVVEDTGV
TEAELKEEFGSRVAELVMEETEDKTKCWKERKSATLEHLEQASRESKILVLADKLSNLRA
TARDYYLMGDDLWQRFNEKNKSEHAWYYKGVAKRLTGLEEFPAYQEYVKLCEKVFE
NT seq
531 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggtcgagaaagctgttgcctttgcaatcaagtcccatgaagggacctttcggaagggg
acgaagattccctatatcgtccatcccctggagacggcagtcattgtagcattgatggtt
acggatgaagagatgatatgtgctgcccttcttcacgacgtagtggaagatacgggggtt
acagaggcagagcttaaggaagaattcggatcccgggtggctgaactggttatggaagaa
acagaagataaaacaaagtgctggaaggaacgcaaatctgcgacgcttgaacatttggaa
caggcctcaagagagagcaagatccttgttttagcggacaagctgagcaatctgcgggca
acggccagggattattatctgatgggagatgacctttggcagcgttttaacgagaagaat
aagtcggaacacgcatggtattataagggagttgcaaaacgtttgacaggacttgaggaa
ttcccggcatatcaggaatatgttaaattgtgtgaaaaggtttttgaatag
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system