Photinus pyralis (common eastern firefly): 116170721
Help
Entry
116170721 CDS
T07438
Name
(RefSeq) gustatory receptor for sugar taste 64e-like
KO
K08471
gustatory receptor
Organism
ppyr
Photinus pyralis (common eastern firefly)
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
ppyr00001
]
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09183 Protein families: signaling and cellular processes
04030 G protein-coupled receptors [BR:
ppyr04030
]
116170721
G protein-coupled receptors [BR:
ppyr04030
]
Others
Chemoreception
Insect odorant and taste
116170721
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Trehalose_recp
SMP_LBD
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
116170721
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_031343086
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
Unknown
AA seq
303 aa
AA seq
DB search
MAEQILHNPPIHDIFTFILCLGQITGAFPLRFVENVEACSVKFRWMHYKTFYSIFHIFLL
IMMTFFCACGAQMAYISWTFRHIVRTLFYATSLWGAISLFVVVKKWPELVDKWIELDKSM
AHNYGFPKNMNKRAKIMALITTIYATGQILIFVLYNVENTRKLARAQNVPFGHSIYFKTV
FAQVFNAIPYSLILGLLCQFVFFLSIWRFAYSDLFISLISSFLSIRLQQITERVKFAAKK
RRTIAFWREIREDYDRVCVLCKEADDAMSNIIFVTYTTNLVLLLVYLRNCTIIEGLVQLI
QHF
NT seq
912 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggcggaacaaattcttcacaaccctccaattcatgatatatttaccttcatcctttgc
ttgggacaaattacgggcgcatttccgctgcgttttgtagagaatgtcgaagcttgttca
gttaaatttcgatggatgcactataaaaccttctattcgatttttcatattttcttatta
attatgatgacattcttctgtgcgtgcggtgcccaaatggcatatatttcttggactttt
cgccacattgtaagaacgctattttatgcgaccagcttatggggagcaatctctcttttt
gttgtcgtcaaaaagtggccggaattagtcgataaatggattgagctggataaaagtatg
gcacataattatggatttcctaagaatatgaataaacgggcgaagataatggcgctgata
actacaatatatgccactggtcaaattttgatttttgtactatacaacgtggaaaacacc
cgcaaactggcacgggcccaaaatgtaccctttggacatagcatttatttcaaaaccgta
tttgcgcaagtattcaatgcaattccatattcacttattctaggattactatgtcagttc
gtgttctttcttagcatatggcgctttgcctactcggacctttttatttcattgattagc
tcatttttaagcattcgactccagcaaattacagagagggttaaatttgcagcaaaaaag
agacgaaccatagcgttttggagagaaatcagagaagattatgatcgggtgtgcgtttta
tgtaaagaagcagatgatgccatgagtaatattatatttgtcacctacaccactaatctg
gtactgctcttggtataccttcgcaactgcacaataatagaagggttagtgcaactgata
caacatttttaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system