Quercus suber (cork oak): 112017485
Help
Entry
112017485 CDS
T05868
Name
(RefSeq) photosynthetic NDH subunit of lumenal location 5, chloroplastic
KO
K03768
peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase B (cyclophilin B) [EC:
5.2.1.8
]
Organism
qsu
Quercus suber (cork oak)
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
qsu00001
]
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09182 Protein families: genetic information processing
03110 Chaperones and folding catalysts [BR:
qsu03110
]
112017485
Enzymes [BR:
qsu01000
]
5. Isomerases
5.2 cis-trans-Isomerases
5.2.1 cis-trans Isomerases (only sub-subclass identified to date)
5.2.1.8 peptidylprolyl isomerase
112017485
Chaperones and folding catalysts [BR:
qsu03110
]
Protein folding catalysts
Peptidyl prolyl isomerase
Cyclophilin
112017485
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Pro_isomerase
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
112017485
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_065621287
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
Unknown
AA seq
249 aa
AA seq
DB search
MASSLTTLSNVGSLSAPTGVSNKGVLFPTCNSLKLRRSSFSTSLRISHLPSSSNPSSRRR
PGFLSPVRASAEEATVQSKVTQKVYLDISVGNPVGKLAGRIVIGLYGDDVPQTAENFRAL
CTGEKGFGYKGSTFHRVIKDFMIQGGDFDKGNGTGGKSIYGRTFKDENFKLSHVGPGVVS
MANAGPNTNGSQFFICTVKTPWLDQRHVVFGQVLEGLDVVRLIESQETDRGDRPRKKVVV
FDSGELPMV
NT seq
750 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggcgtcttcacttacaaccctttcaaatgtggggtctctctcggctccaacaggcgtg
tcgaacaagggggttctgtttcccacgtgtaactctctcaagcttcggagatcctcattc
tccacctcgttgcgtataagccacctcccttcttcgtcgaacccttcttctcggagaaga
cccgggtttcttagcccagttcgagccagtgctgaggaagctactgtacaatcaaaagtt
actcagaaagtgtatttggatataagcgttgggaatccagtagggaagcttgccggaagg
attgtgattggattgtatggtgatgatgtgccccaaactgcggagaatttccgcgccctt
tgcacaggagagaagggctttggatacaaaggttcgacgttccatcgtgtaatcaaggac
tttatgattcaaggaggggactttgataaaggaaatggaactggaggcaaaagtatatat
ggtcgtacatttaaagatgagaacttcaagttgtctcatgttggaccgggagttgttagc
atggcaaatgcaggccccaacaccaatggaagtcaatttttcatatgcactgttaagaca
ccttggctggatcagaggcatgttgtgtttgggcaagttctagaaggccttgatgttgtt
aggctgattgaatcacaagagacagaccgaggagaccgtcccagaaagaaggtggttgta
tttgactctggtgagcttccaatggtctga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system