KEGG   Kroppenstedtia eburnea: GXN75_10650
Entry
GXN75_10650       CDS       T06618                                 
Symbol
sdaAB
Name
(GenBank) L-serine ammonia-lyase, iron-sulfur-dependent, subunit beta
  KO
K01752  L-serine dehydratase [EC:4.3.1.17]
Organism
keb  Kroppenstedtia eburnea
Pathway
keb00260  Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism
keb00270  Cysteine and methionine metabolism
keb01100  Metabolic pathways
keb01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
keb01200  Carbon metabolism
keb01230  Biosynthesis of amino acids
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:keb00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09105 Amino acid metabolism
   00260 Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism
    GXN75_10650 (sdaAB)
   00270 Cysteine and methionine metabolism
    GXN75_10650 (sdaAB)
Enzymes [BR:keb01000]
 4. Lyases
  4.3  Carbon-nitrogen lyases
   4.3.1  Ammonia-lyases
    4.3.1.17  L-serine ammonia-lyase
     GXN75_10650 (sdaAB)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: SDH_beta ACT PGDH_inter ACT_AHAS_ss ACT_4 ACT_6
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: QKI82422
LinkDB
Position
complement(2194717..2195373)
AA seq 218 aa
MKFRSVFDIIGPVMIGPSSSHTAGAARIGRAARSLFGRLPRRVTITLYGSFAKTYRGHGT
DVALVGGLLDFDTDDERMVQALEMARESGVEITFIESEEVADHPNTARLHLEDDQGDLEV
TGISIGGGKMEIVELNGFELRLSGSAPALLVTHHDRYGAVAKVATVLANHRINIGYMQVS
RKEKGLEALMIIETDQYVDDPIQREISSLEDITGVTVL
NT seq 657 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgaaatttcggtctgtttttgatattatcggtcctgtgatgattgggccctccagttcg
cataccgcaggtgcggcgcggatcggaagggcggcccgttctcttttcgggcggttgccc
cgacgggtgaccatcaccttgtacggctcttttgccaagacttatcggggacacgggacc
gatgttgccctggtcgggggattgttggactttgacaccgatgacgaacggatggtgcag
gcgttggagatggcccgggaatcaggggtggagatcaccttcatcgaatcggaagaggtg
gcggatcaccccaatacggcccgccttcatctggaggatgaccaaggggatctggaagtg
acggggatctccatcggtggcggcaagatggaaatcgtggagctgaacggttttgagttg
agactctcgggaagtgcgcctgcactgttggtgacacatcatgaccgatatggagcagtg
gccaaggtggcgacggtcctggcaaaccaccggatcaacatcggatatatgcaggtgtcc
cgaaaagagaagggattggaagcgttgatgatcatcgaaaccgatcagtacgtggatgat
ccgattcaacgggagatctcctctctggaggatatcaccggagtgaccgtgctctga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system