Geobacillus sp. Y412MC52: GYMC52_1925
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Entry
GYMC52_1925 CDS
T01399
Name
(GenBank) phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent sugar phosphotransferase system EIIA 2
KO
K02798
mannitol PTS system EIIA component [EC:
2.7.1.197
]
Organism
gya
Geobacillus sp. Y412MC52
Pathway
gya00051
Fructose and mannose metabolism
gya01100
Metabolic pathways
gya02060
Phosphotransferase system (PTS)
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
gya00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09101 Carbohydrate metabolism
00051 Fructose and mannose metabolism
GYMC52_1925
09130 Environmental Information Processing
09131 Membrane transport
02060 Phosphotransferase system (PTS)
GYMC52_1925
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09183 Protein families: signaling and cellular processes
02000 Transporters [BR:
gya02000
]
GYMC52_1925
Enzymes [BR:
gya01000
]
2. Transferases
2.7 Transferring phosphorus-containing groups
2.7.1 Phosphotransferases with an alcohol group as acceptor
2.7.1.197 protein-Npi-phosphohistidine---D-mannitol phosphotransferase
GYMC52_1925
Transporters [BR:
gya02000
]
Phosphotransferase system (PTS)
Enzyme II [TC:
4.A
]
Mannitol-specific II component
GYMC52_1925
BRITE hierarchy
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Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
PTS_EIIA_2
SapB_1
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ADU94345
UniProt:
A0A0E0TCC2
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Position
complement(1992937..1993380)
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AA seq
147 aa
AA seq
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MLAHSILNKENIVLNAQPKTKEEAIRLAGEVLVKQGYVDPAYVDAMLEREELTSTYIGNN
VAIPHGTEAAKALVKHSGISIVQVPDGVDFGGGNMATIVIGIAGKDGEHLDILSQLALVC
AEADHVEAMANAKTEEEILALLHEVNG
NT seq
444 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgttggctcattcgattttaaacaaagaaaacattgtgctcaatgcgcaaccaaaaacg
aaagaagaggcgatccgcctcgccggcgaggtgttggtcaagcaaggatatgtcgacccg
gcatatgttgatgcgatgcttgaacgggaagaactgacatcaacgtatatcggcaacaac
gtcgccattccgcacggaacggaagcggcaaaagcgcttgtcaaacattccggcatttcg
atcgtgcaagttccagacggcgtcgattttggcggcggcaacatggccacgatcgtgatc
ggcattgccggcaaagatggggaacatttagacatcctctctcaactcgcacttgtttgc
gcggaagcggatcatgtagaagcgatggcgaacgccaaaacagaagaagaaattcttgcg
ctgctccatgaggtgaacggctga
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