KEGG   Leptidea sinapis (Wood White): 126974494
Entry
126974494         CDS       T09272                                 
Name
(RefSeq) UDP-N-acetylglucosamine transferase subunit ALG13 homolog
  KO
K07432  beta-1,4-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase [EC:2.4.1.141]
Organism
lsin  Leptidea sinapis (Wood White)
Pathway
lsin00510  N-Glycan biosynthesis
lsin00513  Various types of N-glycan biosynthesis
lsin01100  Metabolic pathways
Module
lsin_M00055  N-glycan precursor biosynthesis
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:lsin00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09107 Glycan biosynthesis and metabolism
   00510 N-Glycan biosynthesis
    126974494
   00513 Various types of N-glycan biosynthesis
    126974494
 09180 Brite Hierarchies
  09181 Protein families: metabolism
   01003 Glycosyltransferases [BR:lsin01003]
    126974494
Enzymes [BR:lsin01000]
 2. Transferases
  2.4  Glycosyltransferases
   2.4.1  Hexosyltransferases
    2.4.1.141  N-acetylglucosaminyldiphosphodolichol N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase
     126974494
Glycosyltransferases [BR:lsin01003]
 N-Glycan biosynthesis
  Dol-linked oligosaccharide
   126974494
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: Glyco_tran_28_C
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID: 126974494
NCBI-ProteinID: XP_050677967
LinkDB
Position
32:8038704..8040541
AA seq 174 aa
MKPEQHYENCFVTVGTTRFDLLCEYITSGPVLETLKKMGCKNITFQIGNSDRKPGQFEME
GININMYRFKNTIENDIRNADFVISHAGAGSCLEVLDAKKPLLVVINEDLMDNHQLELAE
QLQIDGHLFYCTCDTLKDTLEGIDFTMLVPFPDSNPQPFFKALDNMLQIKDKSH
NT seq 525 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgaaacctgaacaacattacgagaactgctttgtaactgttggaaccacaagatttgat
ttactttgcgagtatattacttcaggtccagtattggagacattaaaaaaaatgggctgt
aaaaacattacattccaaattggcaatagtgatcgaaaacctggacaatttgagatggaa
ggaataaacattaacatgtacagatttaaaaatacaatagaaaatgacattagaaatgca
gattttgttataagccatgctggtgcaggcagttgcttagaagttttagatgcgaaaaaa
ccacttcttgttgttattaacgaagatctaatggacaaccatcaattggaattagcagag
caattgcaaattgatggacatttgttttattgtacctgtgatacattgaaagatactcta
gaaggcattgatttcaccatgttagtgcctttccctgactccaatccacaacctttcttt
aaggctttagataatatgttacaaattaaagacaagtcacattaa

DBGET integrated database retrieval system