KEGG   Mycolicibacter hiberniae: MHIB_31090
Entry
MHIB_31090        CDS       T06801                                 
Symbol
fadE33
Name
(GenBank) acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
  KO
K28221  5OH-HIP-CoA dehydrogenase [EC:1.3.99.-]
Organism
mhib  Mycolicibacter hiberniae
Pathway
mhib00984  Steroid degradation
mhib01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:mhib00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
   00984 Steroid degradation
    MHIB_31090 (fadE33)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: Acyl-CoA_dh_1 Acyl-CoA_dh_N Acyl-CoA_dh_2
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: BBZ24691
UniProt: A0A7I7X7R5
LinkDB
Position
3258962..3259909
AA seq 315 aa
MARNDERDLLRQTVAALVDKHATPEAVRVAMDSERGYDETLWQLLCEQVGAAALVVPEEL
GGAGGELGDAAVVVEELGKALVPTPLLGTILAELALLAAAEPDAEALEQLAEGGAIGAVV
FDDGYAANGDIADIVVGARNGRLERWTGFDTEPVATMDPTRRLGRITPTATTTIGDDPGI
ADYASILLAAEQIGAADRCLELTVEYTKSRVQFGRPIGSFQALKHRMADLYVAVSAARAV
VADAIAEPSATSAALARVVASEALSKVAAEAVQLHGGIAITWESDIQLYFKRAHGSSQLL
GLPAQHLRRLQAEVL
NT seq 948 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
gtggcccgtaacgacgaacgcgatctgttgcgccagacggtggcggcactggtcgacaag
cacgccacgcccgaggcggttcgggtggcgatggactccgagcgcggctacgacgagacg
ctgtggcagctgctgtgcgaacaggtcggcgccgctgctctggtggtgcccgaggaactc
ggcggtgccggcggcgaactcggcgacgccgcggtcgttgtcgaagaactgggcaaggcg
ctggtaccgactccgctgctgggcaccatcctggccgagctggcgctgctggcagcggcc
gagcccgacgccgaagcgttggagcagctggccgaaggcggcgcgatcggagccgtcgtg
ttcgacgacggctatgccgccaatggtgacatcgccgatatcgtcgtgggcgcccgcaac
ggccggctggagcgctggaccggcttcgacaccgagccggtggccaccatggaccccacc
cgccgactggggcgaatcacccccaccgcgaccacgaccatcggcgacgaccccggtatc
gcggactacgcgtcgatcctgctggccgccgagcagatcggcgccgcggaccgctgcctg
gagctgaccgtggagtacaccaagagccgggtgcagttcggccgcccgatcggcagtttc
caggcgctcaagcaccggatggccgacctgtacgtcgccgtttcggccgcccgcgcggtc
gtcgcggacgccatcgccgaaccgtcggcgacctcggctgcactggcgcgtgtggtggcc
agcgaggcgctgtcgaaggtcgccgccgaggcagtgcagctgcacggcggaatcgcgatc
acctgggagagcgacatccagctgtacttcaaacgcgcgcacggcagttcgcagctgctc
ggcctgcccgcacaacatcttcggcggctgcaggccgaggtgctctaa

DBGET integrated database retrieval system