Edwardsiella ictaluri: NT01EI_0390
Help
Entry
NT01EI_0390 CDS
T00912
Name
(GenBank) fumarate reductase, subunit C, putative
KO
K00246
succinate dehydrogenase subunit C
Organism
eic
Edwardsiella ictaluri
Pathway
eic00020
Citrate cycle (TCA cycle)
eic00190
Oxidative phosphorylation
eic00620
Pyruvate metabolism
eic00650
Butanoate metabolism
eic00720
Other carbon fixation pathways
eic01100
Metabolic pathways
eic01110
Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
eic01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
eic01200
Carbon metabolism
eic02020
Two-component system
Module
eic_M00009
Citrate cycle (TCA cycle, Krebs cycle)
eic_M00011
Citrate cycle, second carbon oxidation, 2-oxoglutarate => oxaloacetate
eic_M00150
Fumarate reductase, prokaryotes
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
eic00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09101 Carbohydrate metabolism
00020 Citrate cycle (TCA cycle)
NT01EI_0390
00620 Pyruvate metabolism
NT01EI_0390
00650 Butanoate metabolism
NT01EI_0390
09102 Energy metabolism
00190 Oxidative phosphorylation
NT01EI_0390
00720 Other carbon fixation pathways
NT01EI_0390
09130 Environmental Information Processing
09132 Signal transduction
02020 Two-component system
NT01EI_0390
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Fumarate_red_C
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ACR67631
UniProt:
C5BDL5
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(398044..398442)
Genome browser
AA seq
132 aa
AA seq
DB search
MTTSTKRKPYVRGMSSNWWHKLGFYKFYMLRESSALENVWFSIVLIYGVFSLKDGAAGWE
SFVAFLQNPLVLVLNIISLLLAVLHTKTWFELAPKAANIVVNDEKMGPAPIIKALWVVTI
VVTVVVLGLALL
NT seq
399 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgacgacttcaaccaaacgcaaaccctatgtgcggggtatgtcatccaactggtggcac
aagctgggtttctataagttctacatgctgcgcgaaagttcagcgctggaaaacgtctgg
ttcagcattgtgctgatctatggcgtattctcgctgaaagacggtgccgcaggctgggaa
agctttgttgcgttcctgcaaaacccgctggtactggtcctcaatatcatctccctgctg
ctggccgtgctgcataccaagacctggtttgagctggcgccaaaagcggccaacatcgtg
gtaaacgatgagaagatgggcccggcaccgattatcaaggcgctgtgggttgtcactatc
gtcgttaccgtggtggttctgggcctggccctgctgtaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system