KEGG   Gordonia pseudamarae: GII33_10880
Entry
GII33_10880       CDS       T07482                                 
Symbol
deoD
Name
(GenBank) purine-nucleoside phosphorylase
  KO
K03784  purine-nucleoside phosphorylase [EC:2.4.2.1]
Organism
gpd  Gordonia pseudamarae
Pathway
gpd00230  Purine metabolism
gpd00760  Nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism
gpd01100  Metabolic pathways
gpd01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
gpd01232  Nucleotide metabolism
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:gpd00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09104 Nucleotide metabolism
   00230 Purine metabolism
    GII33_10880 (deoD)
  09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
   00760 Nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism
    GII33_10880 (deoD)
Enzymes [BR:gpd01000]
 2. Transferases
  2.4  Glycosyltransferases
   2.4.2  Pentosyltransferases
    2.4.2.1  purine-nucleoside phosphorylase
     GII33_10880 (deoD)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: PNP_UDP_1
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: QHN26395
LinkDB
Position
complement(2466869..2467579)
AA seq 236 aa
MTDLSTPHIDPQGEPIAETILLPGDPLRAKFIAETYLDNPRCFNRVRNMLGYTGTYRGRQ
ISVMGTGMGIPSISLYSHELIHTFGVRNLIRVGSCGSMQEHVDLYDVVIAQGASTDSNYL
TQFAIPGTYAPLSSYRLLEQAKRLADERGATSHVGNILSSDIFYNDNDRTLGRWARMGVL
AVEMESAGLFANAAAAGVDALGIFTVSDHISSGRRTTPAERETAFTTMIEIALELG
NT seq 711 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgaccgacctgtccaccccgcacatcgacccgcagggcgagccgatcgccgagaccatc
ctgctgcccggtgacccgttgcgcgccaagttcatcgccgagacctacctcgacaacccg
cgctgcttcaaccgggtacgcaacatgctcggttacaccggaacctaccggggccggcag
atctcggtgatgggcacgggcatgggcatcccgtcgatctcgctctacagccacgagctg
atccacaccttcggtgtccgcaacctgatccgggtcggcagctgcgggtcgatgcaggag
cacgtggacctgtacgacgtggtgatcgcccagggcgcctccaccgactcgaactatctg
acccagttcgcgattcccggcacttacgcacccctgtcgtcgtatcggctgctcgaacag
gccaaacgcctggccgacgagcgcggcgcgaccagccacgtgggcaacatcctgtcctcg
gacatcttctacaacgacaacgaccgcaccctgggccgatgggccaggatgggtgtgctc
gcggtcgagatggaatcggccggactgttcgccaacgcggccgccgccggggtggacgca
ctcggcatcttcaccgtcagcgaccacatctccagcggcagacggaccacccccgccgag
cgggaaacggcgttcacgacgatgatcgagatcgccctggaactgggctga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system