KEGG   Marinobacter sp. NP-4(2019): EHN06_04435
Entry
EHN06_04435       CDS       T09527                                 
Symbol
aroK
Name
(GenBank) shikimate kinase AroK
  KO
K00891  shikimate kinase [EC:2.7.1.71]
Organism
manp  Marinobacter sp. NP-4(2019)
Pathway
manp00400  Phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis
manp01100  Metabolic pathways
manp01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
manp01230  Biosynthesis of amino acids
Module
manp_M00022  Shikimate pathway, phosphoenolpyruvate + erythrose-4P => chorismate
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:manp00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09105 Amino acid metabolism
   00400 Phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis
    EHN06_04435 (aroK)
Enzymes [BR:manp01000]
 2. Transferases
  2.7  Transferring phosphorus-containing groups
   2.7.1  Phosphotransferases with an alcohol group as acceptor
    2.7.1.71  shikimate kinase
     EHN06_04435 (aroK)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: SKI AAA_18 AAA_33 Cytidylate_kin AAA_17 Cytidylate_kin2 AAA_16 dNK AAA AAA_28 AAA_22 ABC_tran CoaE TsaE Rad17 nSTAND3 Zeta_toxin Guanylate_kin ORC-CDC6-like RuvB_N RNA_helicase AAA_29
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: AZT82849
LinkDB
Position
982347..982913
AA seq 188 aa
MSLPKRIVLVGPMGAGKSTIGRMLARELGYRFLDSDRIIEERCGANIPWIFDVEGEEGFR
QRETAMLSELSEQHETVLATGGGAVMKPENHELLKRDATVIYLKTSIEQQVERTRRDRNR
PLLQNDNPEAVLRKLFALRDPVYTKLADIVMHTDRKSPRLVVRQLVNRVNPKTPRHRRQV
RKEGRNHA
NT seq 567 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgtcattgccaaaacgaattgtcctggttggccctatgggcgcgggcaaaagcactatt
ggtcgcatgcttgccagagagctgggctatcgttttctggattcggacagaattattgaa
gagcgatgtggtgccaatatcccctggatctttgatgttgagggggaagagggatttcga
caacgcgaaacggccatgctgtcagagttatcagaacagcatgaaaccgtcctcgctacg
gggggcggcgccgttatgaaacccgagaatcacgagctcctcaagcgcgatgctaccgtt
atctatcttaaaacctcaatagagcagcaggttgagagaacgcggcgggatcggaaccgt
ccgcttttgcagaacgataatcccgaggctgtgttgcgcaagctgtttgccctgagggat
cctgtctatacaaagttggcggatattgtcatgcacaccgaccggaagagtccgaggctg
gtggtgcgtcagttggtcaaccgggtgaacccgaaaactccgcgtcatcgtcggcaggta
aggaaggaggggcgaaatcatgcgtaa

DBGET integrated database retrieval system