Pecten maximus (king scallop): 117337779
Help
Entry
117337779 CDS
T07399
Name
(RefSeq) otolin-1-like
KO
K24237
complement C1q and tumor necrosis factor-related protein 4
Organism
pmax
Pecten maximus (king scallop)
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
pmax00001
]
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09183 Protein families: signaling and cellular processes
04990 Domain-containing proteins not elsewhere classified [BR:
pmax04990
]
117337779
Domain-containing proteins not elsewhere classified [BR:
pmax04990
]
C1q domain-containing proteins
CBLN / gliacolin group proteins
117337779
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
C1q
BclA_C
DAHL
AllG
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
117337779
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_033754784
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
11:12360681..12363452
Genome browser
AA seq
281 aa
AA seq
DB search
MAWRSVFTICILMLGMSLVIGSPSSTADDGGSDVDMREIRLLLQKHESQIESLQRTNVLL
EEKSAIFEEKSAILEGTVLTLEEKVMTLEKKVNTFEQNDPNTDQKESIKADPDVFSAANS
SSLSDSKIRSSQKHQGSAIKKINKRVDSTTDSIIAFHAILTHTISNPTGDHIVQFDKIVT
NIGGHFNSKSGVFTCVEVGAYQFSWMIKVFNNQYIVTELVRNGVVIGTGMSGDDNMWTTG
SASSITMLVPGDSVWVRVSGDHSQGVDIYPTFTMFNGFLLH
NT seq
846 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggcgtggcgctcagtgtttaccatatgtatccttatgctgggcatgtccttggtgata
gggagtccctcctccacagccgatgatggaggctctgatgtggacatgcgtgaaatcaga
cttctcctacaaaaacacgagtctcaaatagaatcactccaaaggacgaacgtactactt
gaagagaaatctgcgatatttgaagagaaatccgcgatacttgaagggaccgtccttaca
cttgaagagaaagtcatgacgctagaaaagaaagtcaatacgtttgaacaaaatgatcct
aatactgatcagaaagaaagtatcaaagcagacccagacgtcttcagtgcagcaaatagt
tcgtctttatctgacagtaaaataagatcatcgcaaaaacaccaaggaagcgctatcaag
aaaattaacaaacgtgtcgactccacaactgacagcataatagctttccacgccattctt
acacatacaatatccaatccaacaggagatcatatcgttcagtttgacaaaatcgtcaca
aatatcggtggtcatttcaattctaaatctggcgtgttcacttgtgtggaagttggcgct
taccagttttcttggatgatcaaagtttttaataaccagtacattgttacagaattagtt
cgtaacggcgtggttatagggacaggcatgagtggagacgataacatgtggactacaggc
tcagcatcatcaatcacgatgctggttcccggtgattcggtctgggtacgtgtatctggt
gaccacagtcagggggtggatatctaccctacatttacgatgtttaacgggtttcttcta
cattaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system