KEGG   Pseudomonas sp. TCU-HL1: THL1_2893
Entry
THL1_2893         CDS       T05373                                 
Name
(GenBank) benzene 1,2-dioxygenase
  KO
K05550  benzoate/toluate 1,2-dioxygenase subunit beta [EC:1.14.12.10 1.14.12.-]
Organism
pset  Pseudomonas sp. TCU-HL1
Pathway
pset00362  Benzoate degradation
pset00364  Fluorobenzoate degradation
pset00622  Xylene degradation
pset01100  Metabolic pathways
pset01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
pset01220  Degradation of aromatic compounds
Module
pset_M00551  Benzoate degradation, benzoate => catechol / methylbenzoate => methylcatechol
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:pset00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
   00362 Benzoate degradation
    THL1_2893
   00364 Fluorobenzoate degradation
    THL1_2893
   00622 Xylene degradation
    THL1_2893
Enzymes [BR:pset01000]
 1. Oxidoreductases
  1.14  Acting on paired donors, with incorporation or reduction of molecular oxygen
   1.14.12  With NADH or NADPH as one donor, and incorporation of two atoms of oxygen into the other donor
    1.14.12.10  benzoate 1,2-dioxygenase
     THL1_2893
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: Ring_hydroxyl_B SnoaL_4 SnoaL_2
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: AOE85441
UniProt: A0A1B3E7B5
LinkDB
Position
3124819..3125307
AA seq 162 aa
MSISYDAVRDFLYREARYLDDKDWDNWLELYASDASFWMPSWDDRDELTTDPQTEISLIW
YGNRGGLEDRVFRIKTDRSSATMPDTRTSHNISNIEILEVADGQCKVRFNWHTLSFRYKT
VDSYFGTSFYTLDVRGESPLIKAKKVVLKNDYVRQVIDIYHI
NT seq 489 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgagcatctcttacgacgccgtgcgcgacttcctctaccgcgaagcgcgctacctggac
gacaaggactgggacaactggctggagctgtatgccagcgacgccagcttctggatgccg
tcctgggacgaccgcgatgagctgaccaccgatccgcagaccgaaatctcgctgatctgg
tacggcaaccgtggcggcctggaagaccgcgtcttccgcatcaagaccgaccgctccagc
gcgaccatgccggacacccgaacctcccacaacatcagcaacatcgagatcctcgaagtg
gccgacgggcagtgcaaggtgcgcttcaactggcacaccctgagcttccgctacaagacc
gtggacagctacttcggcaccagcttctacaccctcgacgtgcgtggcgagagcccgctg
atcaaggcgaagaaggtcgttctcaagaatgactacgttcgccaggtcatcgacatctat
cacatttga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system