KEGG   Enterococcus avium: EH197_04395
Entry
EH197_04395       CDS       T05982                                 
Symbol
prdB
Name
(GenBank) D-proline reductase (dithiol) protein PrdB
  KO
K10794  D-proline reductase (dithiol) PrdB [EC:1.21.4.1]
Organism
eav  Enterococcus avium
Pathway
eav00330  Arginine and proline metabolism
eav00470  D-Amino acid metabolism
eav01100  Metabolic pathways
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:eav00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09105 Amino acid metabolism
   00330 Arginine and proline metabolism
    EH197_04395 (prdB)
  09106 Metabolism of other amino acids
   00470 D-Amino acid metabolism
    EH197_04395 (prdB)
Enzymes [BR:eav01000]
 1. Oxidoreductases
  1.21  Catalysing the reaction X-H + Y-H = X-Y
   1.21.4  With a disulfide as acceptor
    1.21.4.1  D-proline reductase
     EH197_04395 (prdB)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: GRDB UGSC Asparaginase Thioredoxin_3 DUF6716
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: QCQ11459
LinkDB
Position
complement(799144..799869)
AA seq 241 aa
MGLTVFEGLQSEIFVPITPKSVFTPVKKELKEMRVALATAAGVHLKSDKRFNLAGDTTYR
EVPDTSKVEDLMVSHGGYDNADANRDINSMFPLDRLHELAAEGFIKESAPVHYAFMGGGG
DQDAFHDVTGPEIAQKLVEEEVDAVVLTAGUGTCHRTAVIVQRAIEEAGIPTILIAALPP
VVRQNGTPRAVAPRVPMGANAGEPHNIEMQTGIMKDTLEALVSIETPGKIVPLPYEYIAH
V
NT seq 726 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgggcttaacagtctttgaagggttacagtcagaaatttttgtgccgattacgccaaaa
tctgtctttacccctgtgaaaaaagagcttaaagaaatgcgcgtggcgttagcaacagca
gctggcgtacacttaaaatcagataaacgtttcaatttagcgggtgatacaacataccgc
gaagtaccagatacttcaaaagtagaggatttgatggtttctcacggtggttatgataat
gccgatgcgaaccgcgatatcaattcgatgttcccgttagatcgtttacatgaattagct
gcagaaggctttatcaaagaatctgcacctgttcactacgcattcatgggcggcggtgga
gaccaagacgcattccacgatgtgactggaccagaaatcgctcaaaaattagtagaagaa
gaagtcgacgctgtcgtcttaaccgctggctgaggaacctgtcatagaactgccgtgatc
gtgcagagagctattgaggaagcgggaattcctactattttaatcgccgcattaccacca
gttgtacgccaaaacgggactccacgtgccgttgcgccgcgtgtaccaatgggtgccaat
gccggtgaaccacacaacattgaaatgcaaacaggtatcatgaaggatactttagaagca
ttagtatcaatcgaaacgccagggaaaattgttccattaccttatgaatacattgcccac
gtctaa

DBGET integrated database retrieval system