Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean): 137830448
Help
Entry
137830448 CDS
T03093
Name
(RefSeq) probable pterin-4-alpha-carbinolamine dehydratase, chloroplastic
KO
K01724
4a-hydroxytetrahydrobiopterin dehydratase [EC:
4.2.1.96
]
Organism
pvu
Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean)
Pathway
pvu00790
Folate biosynthesis
pvu01100
Metabolic pathways
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
pvu00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
00790 Folate biosynthesis
137830448
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09183 Protein families: signaling and cellular processes
04147 Exosome [BR:
pvu04147
]
137830448
Enzymes [BR:
pvu01000
]
4. Lyases
4.2 Carbon-oxygen lyases
4.2.1 Hydro-lyases
4.2.1.96 4a-hydroxytetrahydrobiopterin dehydratase
137830448
Exosome [BR:
pvu04147
]
Exosomal proteins
Exosomal proteins of other body fluids (saliva and urine)
137830448
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Pterin_4a
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
137830448
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_068493885
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
7:36409173..36412583
Genome browser
AA seq
216 aa
AA seq
DB search
MATTACNFNLNLNLGFHGMHQKPMTWPTRAPSVSRGGNGVAPLVVTRAIDTNEFLGDFGA
RDPFPAELESSFGEKVLGYGNTEHRILIPNISALSLSQQDCAPISPSQPPISEHDAQMLV
RKVVGWRLVNEEGGHKLRCLWKLRDFKCGVELINRISKVAEAAGHFPNIYLEQPNQVRAE
LWTTSIGGLSMNDFIVAAKIDEIKTSDLVPRKRVWA
NT seq
651 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggccaccaccgcatgtaacttcaatcttaaccttaaccttgggtttcatgggatgcac
cagaagcccatgacgtggcccacacgcgccccgtcggtgagtcgcggtggaaacggggtg
gcaccgctggtggttacgcgcgccatcgacacgaacgagttcctgggggacttcggggcg
agggacccttttccggcggaattggagagctcgttcggagagaaggtgctgggatacggc
aacaccgagcacagaatcctgatccccaatatctctgctctctctctctcgcagcaggac
tgtgcccccatttccccttcgcaacctcccatctcagaacacgacgctcagatgctcgtc
agaaaggttgtgggttggagacttgtgaatgaggaaggtggacataaacttcgatgcttg
tggaaattgagagattttaaatgtggggttgaactaattaacaggatctctaaggttgct
gaggctgcaggccatttccctaatatctacttagaacaaccaaatcaagtcagggcagaa
ctatggacaacttccattggaggtttaagtatgaatgattttattgttgctgcaaagata
gatgaaataaagacttcagatcttgtcccaaggaaaagggtttgggcataa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system