Rhodococcus coprophilus: NCTC10994_02983
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Entry
NCTC10994_02983 CDS
T06666
Symbol
scpA_2
Name
(GenBank) methylmalonyl-CoA mutase
KO
K01849
methylmalonyl-CoA mutase, C-terminal domain [EC:
5.4.99.2
]
Organism
rcr
Rhodococcus coprophilus
Pathway
rcr00280
Valine, leucine and isoleucine degradation
rcr00630
Glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism
rcr00640
Propanoate metabolism
rcr00720
Other carbon fixation pathways
rcr01100
Metabolic pathways
rcr01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
rcr01200
Carbon metabolism
Module
rcr_M00741
Propanoyl-CoA metabolism, propanoyl-CoA => succinyl-CoA
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
rcr00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09101 Carbohydrate metabolism
00630 Glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism
NCTC10994_02983 (scpA_2)
00640 Propanoate metabolism
NCTC10994_02983 (scpA_2)
09102 Energy metabolism
00720 Other carbon fixation pathways
NCTC10994_02983 (scpA_2)
09105 Amino acid metabolism
00280 Valine, leucine and isoleucine degradation
NCTC10994_02983 (scpA_2)
Enzymes [BR:
rcr01000
]
5. Isomerases
5.4 Intramolecular transferases
5.4.99 Transferring other groups
5.4.99.2 methylmalonyl-CoA mutase
NCTC10994_02983 (scpA_2)
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Motif
Pfam:
B12-binding
G3P_antiterm
FMN_dh
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
SQI35003
UniProt:
A0A2X4U725
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All DBs
Position
1:3212439..3212840
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AA seq
133 aa
AA seq
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MSARILVAKPGLDGHDRGAKIVARALRDAGFEVIYTGIRQKVEDIVSIAVQEDVAVVGLS
ILSGAHVALTTKVIEELRAADAGDIDVIVGGTIPQSDVPKLLAAGAAAVCPTSTPLDVLV
EEVRKLTGTAAPL
NT seq
402 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgagcgcccgtattcttgtcgccaagcccggtctcgacggccacgatcgcggtgccaag
atcgtcgcccgcgccctccgcgacgccggattcgaagtgatctacaccggaatccgccag
aaggtcgaagacatcgtctccatcgcggtgcaggaagacgtggcggtggtcggcctcagc
atcctttcgggagcacacgtcgcactcaccaccaaggtgatcgaggaactgcgtgcggcc
gacgccggcgacatcgacgtgatcgtcggcggcacgattccgcagagcgacgtgcccaag
cttctcgccgccggcgcggcagcggtgtgccccacgagcactccgctggacgtcctcgtc
gaagaggttcggaaactgacgggcacggccgcgccgctgtga
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