Dyella japonica: HY57_20110
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Entry
HY57_20110 CDS
T03215
Name
(GenBank) maleylacetoacetate isomerase
KO
K01800
maleylacetoacetate isomerase [EC:
5.2.1.2
]
Organism
dja
Dyella japonica
Pathway
dja00350
Tyrosine metabolism
dja00643
Styrene degradation
dja01100
Metabolic pathways
dja01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
Module
dja_M00044
Tyrosine degradation, tyrosine => homogentisate
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
dja00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09105 Amino acid metabolism
00350 Tyrosine metabolism
HY57_20110
09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
00643 Styrene degradation
HY57_20110
Enzymes [BR:
dja01000
]
5. Isomerases
5.2 cis-trans-Isomerases
5.2.1 cis-trans Isomerases (only sub-subclass identified to date)
5.2.1.2 maleylacetoacetate isomerase
HY57_20110
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GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
GST_N_3
GST_N_2
GST_N
GST_C_2
GST_N_4
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AIF49398
UniProt:
A0A075KAZ0
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Position
complement(4628422..4629090)
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AA seq
222 aa
AA seq
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MGQDLVLYGYWRSSAAYRVRIALNLKGLPYESKAVHLVNQGGEQHLPDFQALNPQELVPC
LIDDGRVFTQSMAIMEYLDETHPAPPLLPADPAGRARVRALSQVVACDVHPLGNLRVLQH
LTSQFGADDAAKGVWSRHWIGLGLQSLEAMLAGNVATGRFCHGDAPSMADACLVPQVYNA
VRWKLPMEDFPTICRIVDACQSLEAFQRAVPEAQPDAPATQG
NT seq
669 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggggcaggatctggtgttgtacggctattggcgttccagtgcggcctatcgggtgcgc
atcgccctgaacctgaaggggctgccgtacgagtccaaggcggtacacctggtcaatcag
ggcggcgagcagcacctgccggacttccaggctctcaacccgcaggagctggtgccctgc
ctgatcgacgacgggcgggtgttcacccagtccatggcgatcatggagtacctggatgaa
acccatccagcgccgccgctgctcccggccgatccggccggcagggcgcgggtacgcgcg
ttgtcgcaggtggtcgcctgtgacgtgcatccgctcggcaacctgcgcgtgctccagcac
ctgacgtcgcagttcggggcggatgacgccgccaaaggcgtgtggtcacgccattggatc
ggcctgggcctgcagtcgctggaagcgatgctggcgggcaatgtcgccacgggccggttc
tgtcacggcgatgcgcccagcatggcggacgcctgcctggtgccgcaggtctacaacgcg
gtgcgctggaagttgccgatggaggacttcccgaccatctgccgcatcgtggatgcctgc
cagtcgctggaagctttccagcgggccgtgccggaagcgcagccggatgcgcctgccact
cagggctga
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