Lachnospiraceae bacterium oral taxon 500: C3V36_13190
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Entry
C3V36_13190 CDS
T05749
Name
(GenBank) phosphoribosylaminoimidazolesuccinocarboxamide synthase
KO
K01923
phosphoribosylaminoimidazole-succinocarboxamide synthase [EC:
6.3.2.6
]
Organism
lbw
Lachnospiraceae bacterium oral taxon 500
Pathway
lbw00230
Purine metabolism
lbw01100
Metabolic pathways
lbw01110
Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
Module
lbw_M00048
De novo purine biosynthesis, PRPP + glutamine => IMP
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
lbw00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09104 Nucleotide metabolism
00230 Purine metabolism
C3V36_13190
Enzymes [BR:
lbw01000
]
6. Ligases
6.3 Forming carbon-nitrogen bonds
6.3.2 Acid-D-amino-acid ligases (peptide synthases)
6.3.2.6 phosphoribosylaminoimidazolesuccinocarboxamide synthase
C3V36_13190
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Motif
Pfam:
SAICAR_synt
Pyr_redox_dim
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AVM70116
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Position
complement(2889294..2889980)
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AA seq
228 aa
AA seq
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MKEIYRGKTKDVFDLENGQYLLKFKDDVTGTDGVFDPGANTVGLTMEGAGEAGLKLTKFF
FEKINAAGIVTHYVSADIANRTMTVLPASVFGEGVEVICRYRAVGSFLRRYGKYAADGQK
LDAYVEVTLKDDDRNDPLITEEALDMLGIMTRQEYRTLAEMTRQIAAIVKAELAKKGLEL
YDIKFEFGRVGEDKQIALIDEISGGNMRAYRNGEYIEPLQLEKLMLAD
NT seq
687 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgaaagaaatttatcggggaaagacgaaagacgtatttgatttggaaaatggccagtat
ttgctgaagtttaaagatgatgtgaccggcacggacggtgttttcgatccgggtgccaat
acggttggactgacaatggaaggtgccggggaagccggactgaaactgacgaagttcttt
tttgaaaaaatcaacgcggccgggattgttactcattatgtcagtgccgatattgccaat
cggaccatgacggtgctgccggccagtgtttttggagaaggggttgaggtaatttgccgc
taccgggcagtcggcagctttttgcgtcgctacggcaaatatgcggcggatggacaaaag
ctggatgcttatgttgaggtgacattaaaagatgatgaccggaatgatccgctgattacc
gaggaagcgctggatatgctggggattatgacccggcaggagtaccggacgctggcggag
atgacccggcagattgcggcgatcgttaaggcggagttggcgaaaaaaggtttggaatta
tatgatattaagtttgagtttggccgggtgggtgaagataagcagattgctttgattgat
gagatttccggcggcaatatgagagcctaccggaacggagagtacatcgagccgctgcag
ctggaaaaactcatgctggcagattaa
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