KEGG   Haematospirillum jordaniae: AY555_11195
Entry
AY555_11195       CDS       T04366                                 
Name
(GenBank) hypothetical protein
  KO
K01057  6-phosphogluconolactonase [EC:3.1.1.31]
Organism
hjo  Haematospirillum jordaniae
Pathway
hjo00030  Pentose phosphate pathway
hjo01100  Metabolic pathways
hjo01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
hjo01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
hjo01200  Carbon metabolism
Module
hjo_M00008  Entner-Doudoroff pathway, glucose-6P => glyceraldehyde-3P + pyruvate
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:hjo00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09101 Carbohydrate metabolism
   00030 Pentose phosphate pathway
    AY555_11195
Enzymes [BR:hjo01000]
 3. Hydrolases
  3.1  Acting on ester bonds
   3.1.1  Carboxylic-ester hydrolases
    3.1.1.31  6-phosphogluconolactonase
     AY555_11195
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: Glucosamine_iso
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: AMW35920
UniProt: A0A145VS75
LinkDB
Position
unnamed2:complement(251817..252530)
AA seq 237 aa
MSNTMTSALAVFPDATTLAESAASLVADSLSDAVSVRGWASLVVPGGRTPAQFLSCLSTA
VLPWDRVSVTLTDERWVGLDDAGSNEAMVRRNLLTAFARRAQLVPLYTGESSPAEGIASV
DRALGAFDDAFDMVVLGMGEDGHIASLFPGEPTWPQPAEGIAAGQFCVPAIGIPGGPERI
SLTLGRLVNARSIVVLATGESKRRLWEDMEAGGPSASLPIGALQASVRCPLTVLWCP
NT seq 714 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgagcaacaccatgacttcagccttggctgttttcccagacgcaacgacattagcggaa
tcagcagcctccttggtggctgattccctgtcggatgctgtttcagtccgtggctgggct
tctttggttgtgcccggggggcggacgccggcacagttcctgtcatgtctttctacggcc
gttctgccatgggatcgggtgtctgtcacgttgacggatgagcgttgggttggtcttgat
gatgccggcagcaacgaggccatggtccgtcgcaacttgctgacagcatttgcccggcgt
gcgcagctggttcctctttataccggggaaagctcccctgctgagggcattgcatcggta
gaccgtgctcttggggcttttgatgatgcctttgatatggttgtcttgggtatgggagaa
gatggccatattgcttctcttttccctggtgagccgacatggccacagccggctgaaggc
attgccgcaggccagttttgcgtccctgcaataggtattcctggcggtccggagcggatc
tcgctcacgctcgggcgtctggtgaatgcccgttctattgttgtgcttgcaacaggggaa
agcaaacgccgcctgtgggaggatatggaggcgggtggtccgtcagcttccctgccaatt
ggtgccctgcaggccagtgtgcgttgtccgttgacggtcctttggtgcccttga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system