KEGG   Phragmites australis (common reed): 133889140
Entry
133889140         CDS       T10575                                 
Name
(RefSeq) phosphomannomutase-like
  KO
K17497  phosphomannomutase [EC:5.4.2.8]
Organism
paua  Phragmites australis (common reed)
Pathway
paua00051  Fructose and mannose metabolism
paua00520  Amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism
paua01100  Metabolic pathways
paua01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
paua01240  Biosynthesis of cofactors
paua01250  Biosynthesis of nucleotide sugars
Module
paua_M00114  Ascorbate biosynthesis, plants, fructose-6P => ascorbate
paua_M01000  GDP-Man biosynthesis, Fru-6P => GDP-Man
Brite
Enzymes [BR:paua01000]
 5. Isomerases
  5.4  Intramolecular transferases
   5.4.2  Phosphotransferases (phosphomutases)
    5.4.2.8  phosphomannomutase
     133889140
SSDB
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID: 133889140
NCBI-ProteinID: XP_062185594
LinkDB
Position
13:31290530..31293218
AA seq 249 aa
MAVAGRNAGVLALFDVDGTLTAPRKVVTPEMLEFMKQLRQHVAVGVVGGSDLMKITEQLG
KSVITDYDFVFSENGLVAHKNGELIGTQSLKSFLGEHKLKEFINFTLHYIADLDIPIKRG
TFIEFRSGMINVSPIGRNCSQEERDEFEKYDKVHNIRPKMVSVLRDKFAHLNLTFSIGGQ
ISFDVFPQDWDKTYCLRYLQEFQEIHFFGDKTYKGGNDYEIFESDRTIGHTVTSPDDTAQ
QCRSLFMSK
NT seq 750 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atggcggtggcggggaggaacgcgggcgtcctcgcgctcttcgacgtcgacggcaccctc
actgccccacgcaaagtggtgacgccggagatgctggagttcatgaagcagctgcgtcag
catgtggctgtcggcgtggtgggcggatccgatctgatgaagattaccgagcagctcggc
aaatcagttattaccgattacgatttcgtcttctctgaaaatggcctggttgcacacaag
aacggcgagctaattggaactcaaagtttgaaatcatttctaggagaacacaagctgaag
gaatttattaacttcactcttcactacattgctgacttggatatcccaattaaaaggggt
acgttcatagaattccgaagtggaatgatcaatgtgtctcctatcggtagaaactgtagt
caagaagaacgtgacgaatttgagaagtacgataaggtgcataacatccgtcctaaaatg
gtgtcagtgcttcgtgacaagtttgcacacttgaacttgacattttctattggagggcag
attagttttgatgtatttccccaagactgggacaaaacttactgcttgagatatcttcag
gaatttcaggaaatccatttctttggggacaagacctacaagggtggcaatgattacgag
atatttgaatctgatagaacaattggtcatacagttaccagtcccgatgacacagcacag
caatgcagatctctcttcatgtcgaagtga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system