Gordonia sp. X0973: HUN08_15975
Help
Entry
HUN08_15975 CDS
T10819
Name
(GenBank) SDR family oxidoreductase
KO
K28220
hydroxylacyl dehydrogenase [EC:1.1.-.-]
Organism
goo Gordonia sp. X0973
Pathway
goo00061
Fatty acid biosynthesis
goo00984
Steroid degradation
goo01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
goo01212
Fatty acid metabolism
goo01240
Biosynthesis of cofactors
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
goo00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09103 Lipid metabolism
00061 Fatty acid biosynthesis
HUN08_15975
09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
00984 Steroid degradation
HUN08_15975
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
adh_short_C2
adh_short
KR
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
QKT08529
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(3233186..3234025)
Genome browser
AA seq
279 aa
AA seq
DB search
MNDRPVSPLAAVPDEIGGHDLLVGKKVVVTAAAGTGIGFATARRALLEGADVLVSDFHER
RLGETVATLAGEFPDQQVVSHVCDVSSTEQVDALIASAAEQLGRIDVLVNNAGLGGETPV
VDMTDEQWDRVLDITLNSCFRATRAALRYFRDAPHGADAGSPAPRGGVIVNNASVLGWRA
QRGQAHYAAAKAGVMALTRCSAVEAADYGVRINAVAPSIARHPFLAKVTSDDLLDELASR
EAYGRAAEVWEIAATIAMLASDYTTYLTGEIVSISSQRA
NT seq
840 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgaacgaccgtcccgtctccccgctggccgccgtgcccgacgagatcggcggccacgac
ctgctcgtcggcaagaaggtcgtggtgaccgccgcggcgggcaccggcatcggattcgcg
acggcccgtcgggccctactcgaaggcgccgacgtcctcgtctccgatttccacgagcgc
cgcctcggtgagaccgtcgcgacgctggccggcgaattccccgatcagcaggttgtctcc
catgtctgcgacgtgtccagcactgagcaggtcgacgccctcatcgcctcggcggccgag
cagttgggccgcatcgacgtgctggtcaacaacgccggtctcggcggcgagactcccgtc
gtcgacatgaccgacgagcagtgggaccgcgtcctcgacatcaccctgaacagttgcttc
cgcgccacccgcgcggcgctgcgctacttccgcgacgcgccccacggtgctgatgccggg
tcgccagctccccgtggcggcgtcatcgtcaacaacgcctcggtactcggctggcgtgcc
cagcgcggccaggcccactacgccgcggccaaggccggggtgatggccctgacccgctgc
tccgccgtcgaggcggccgactacggcgtccgcatcaatgcggtcgccccgtcgatcgcc
cgccacccgttcctggccaaggtgaccagcgacgacctcctcgatgaactcgcctcccgc
gaggcctacggccgcgccgccgaggtctgggagatcgccgccaccattgcgatgctcgcc
agcgactacaccacctacctcaccggggagatcgtctcgatctccagccagcgagcctga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system