KEGG   Pectobacterium parmentieri SCC3193: W5S_0230
Entry
W5S_0230          CDS       T02514                                 
Name
(GenBank) Thiamine-phosphate pyrophosphorylase
  KO
K00788  thiamine-phosphate pyrophosphorylase [EC:2.5.1.3]
Organism
pec  Pectobacterium parmentieri SCC3193
Pathway
pec00730  Thiamine metabolism
pec01100  Metabolic pathways
pec01240  Biosynthesis of cofactors
Module
pec_M00127  Thiamine biosynthesis, prokaryotes, AIR (+ DXP/tyrosine) => TMP/TPP
pec_M00899  Thiamine salvage pathway, HMP/HET => TMP
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:pec00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
   00730 Thiamine metabolism
    W5S_0230
Enzymes [BR:pec01000]
 2. Transferases
  2.5  Transferring alkyl or aryl groups, other than methyl groups
   2.5.1  Transferring alkyl or aryl groups, other than methyl groups (only sub-subclass identified to date)
    2.5.1.3  thiamine phosphate synthase
     W5S_0230
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: TMP-TENI QRPTase_C
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: AFI88361
UniProt: A0A0H3HWY6
LinkDB
Position
complement(258606..259247)
AA seq 213 aa
MTDSTPFAPTAQRLGLYPVVDSVEWIERLLDIGVKTIQLRIKDRSDEQAEVDVIQAIALG
RRYQAQLFINDYWKLAVKHQAYGVHLGQEDLDTADLAAIKQAGLRLGVSTHDDRELARAV
AINPSYIALGHIFPTKTKDMPSAPQGLAELTRHIADLQGRFPTVAIGGISIDKVPAVLET
GVGSIAVVSAITQALDWRQATATLLKMIEGREA
NT seq 642 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgacggactcgacgccttttgccccgacggcacagcggctggggctctatcccgttgtc
gatagcgtggaatggatcgaacgcctactcgatatcggggtgaaaacgatccagctaaga
atcaaagatcgttcagatgaacaggccgaagtcgatgtgatccaagcgatcgcattgggt
cggcgctatcaggcgcagctcttcatcaatgactactggaaattggccgtaaaacatcag
gcatatggcgtacatctgggtcaggaagacctcgataccgccgatctggctgcgattaaa
caagccggcctgcgcttaggtgtctctacgcacgacgatcgtgaactcgcgcgtgcagtg
gcgataaacccgtcctacattgcgctggggcatattttccccacaaaaaccaaagacatg
ccttccgcaccacaagggctggccgaactgacccgacacatcgccgatctgcaaggccgt
tttcccaccgtggcaatcggtggaatcagcatagacaaagtgcctgcggtgctggagacg
ggcgtcggcagtattgccgtcgtcagcgctattacgcaggcgctggactggcggcaggcc
actgcaacgctgctcaagatgattgaaggacgggaggcataa

DBGET integrated database retrieval system