KEGG   Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra: MRA_1219
Entry
MRA_1219          CDS       T00540                                 
Symbol
tagA
Name
(GenBank) DNA-3-methyladenine glycosidase I
  KO
K01246  DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase I [EC:3.2.2.20]
Organism
mra  Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra
Pathway
mra03410  Base excision repair
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:mra00001]
 09120 Genetic Information Processing
  09124 Replication and repair
   03410 Base excision repair
    MRA_1219 (tagA)
 09180 Brite Hierarchies
  09182 Protein families: genetic information processing
   03400 DNA repair and recombination proteins [BR:mra03400]
    MRA_1219 (tagA)
Enzymes [BR:mra01000]
 3. Hydrolases
  3.2  Glycosylases
   3.2.2  Hydrolysing N-glycosyl compounds
    3.2.2.20  DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase I
     MRA_1219 (tagA)
DNA repair and recombination proteins [BR:mra03400]
 Prokaryotic type
  SSBR (single strand breaks repair)
   BER (base exicision repair)
    DNA glycosylases
     MRA_1219 (tagA)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: Adenine_glyco
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: ABQ72958
UniProt: A5U1Q8
LinkDB
Position
1354832..1355446
AA seq 204 aa
MSGDGLVRCPWAEVRPGPDAQLYRDYHDNEWGRPLYGRVALFERMSLEAFQSGLSWLIIL
RKRENFRRAFSGFDIDKIARYTDTDVRRLLADDGIVRNRAKIEATIANARAAADLGSSED
LSELLWSFAPPPRPRPVDGSEIPSVSTESKAMSRELKRRGFRFVGPTTAYALMQATGMVD
DHIQACWVPTERPFDQPGCPMAAR
NT seq 615 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
gtgagcggcgacgggctggttcgctgcccctgggcggaggttcgtccagggcccgatgcc
cagctgtaccgcgactatcacgacaacgaatgggggcgtccgctgtacggccgggtggct
ttgttcgagcgaatgagcctggaggccttccagagtggcctgtcatggttgataatcctg
cgcaagcgggagaatttccggcgcgcattctctgggttcgacatcgacaagatcgctcgc
tacaccgataccgatgtgcgacggctactcgccgatgacggaatcgtgcgcaaccgcgcc
aagattgaggcgacgatcgccaacgcgcgcgcagctgccgatctggggtcgtccgaagac
ctatccgagctgctgtggtcgttcgcgccaccgcctcggccccggcccgtcgacggttcc
gaaattccctcggtcagcacggaatcgaaggctatgtcgcgtgagttgaagcggcgcggg
ttccgtttcgtcgggcccaccaccgcctatgcgttgatgcaggcgaccgggatggtcgac
gaccatatccaagcatgctgggtgcccactgagcgaccttttgaccagccgggctgcccg
atggcggcccggtga

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