Gavia stellata (red-throated loon): 104260178
Help
Entry
104260178 CDS
T08384
Symbol
TK2
Name
(RefSeq) thymidine kinase 2, mitochondrial
KO
K00857
thymidine kinase [EC:
2.7.1.21
]
Organism
gste
Gavia stellata (red-throated loon)
Pathway
gste00240
Pyrimidine metabolism
gste00983
Drug metabolism - other enzymes
gste01100
Metabolic pathways
gste01232
Nucleotide metabolism
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
gste00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09104 Nucleotide metabolism
00240 Pyrimidine metabolism
104260178 (TK2)
09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
00983 Drug metabolism - other enzymes
104260178 (TK2)
Enzymes [BR:
gste01000
]
2. Transferases
2.7 Transferring phosphorus-containing groups
2.7.1 Phosphotransferases with an alcohol group as acceptor
2.7.1.21 thymidine kinase
104260178 (TK2)
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
dNK
AAA_18
AAA_33
Thymidylate_kin
AAA_17
CoaE
TsaE
G-alpha
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
104260178
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_009814110
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
Unknown
AA seq
225 aa
AA seq
DB search
KHLAKEDDRKTVICIEGNIASGKTTCLDYFAQTTSIEVLTEPVTKWRNVRGHNILGLMYQ
DASRWGITLQTYIQLTMLEQHTRPMISPIRMMERSIHSAKYIFVENLYRSGKMPEVDYVV
LTEWFDWIQNNTDVSVDLIVYLQTSPEVCYERLKRRCREEEKIIPLEYLEAIHQLYEEWL
IKHTLFEVSCPVLVIGADHDMQKMIEKYEENRDQILNPYNMHHHL
NT seq
680 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
ataaacatctggcaaaagaagatgatagaaagacagttatatgtatcgaggggaacattg
caagtggaaaaacaacatgcctggattattttgcacaaaccaccagcattgaggtcttga
cagaaccggtgactaagtggaggaatgttcgtggtcataatatcctgggcttaatgtacc
aagacgcatcaagatgggggataacattacagacttacatacagcttacaatgttggagc
agcataccagaccaatgatttcccccataagaatgatggagcgatcaattcacagtgcaa
aatacatttttgtagaaaatttgtaccgaagcggaaaaatgccggaggtggattatgttg
tcctaactgaatggtttgactggatccagaacaacactgatgtttcagtggatttgatag
tttatctgcagacttctcctgaagtttgttatgagaggttaaagagaagatgcagagaag
aggaaaaaatcattcctctggaatatttagaagctattcatcagctctatgaagagtggc
tcattaaacatacactgtttgaagtttcctgcccagtgcttgttattggagctgaccatg
acatgcagaaaatgatagaaaagtatgaagaaaaccgggaccaaatactaaatccatata
atatgcatcatcatttatag
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system