Rhodopseudomonas palustris DX-1: Rpdx1_3147
Help
Entry
Rpdx1_3147 CDS
T01381
Name
(GenBank) hypothetical protein
KO
K17223
L-cysteine S-thiosulfotransferase [EC:
2.8.5.2
]
Organism
rpx
Rhodopseudomonas palustris DX-1
Pathway
rpx00920
Sulfur metabolism
rpx01100
Metabolic pathways
rpx01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
rpx01320
Sulfur cycle
Module
rpx_M00595
Sulfur oxidation, SOX system, thiosulfate => sulfate
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
rpx00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09102 Energy metabolism
00920 Sulfur metabolism
Rpdx1_3147
Enzymes [BR:
rpx01000
]
2. Transferases
2.8 Transferring sulfur-containing groups
2.8.5 Thiosulfotransferases
2.8.5.2 L-cysteine S-thiosulfotransferase
Rpdx1_3147
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Cytochrom_C
Cytochrome_CBB3
MIC19_MIC25
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ADU44726
UniProt:
E6VNJ8
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
3356161..3356898
Genome browser
AA seq
245 aa
AA seq
DB search
MMKLHVSMLALALGGALCCTAPGLSRAADQAIPAKPAGPMSKAADKAAKPAAAPAPAKTA
AAASTVSTDTVDAYIKATFGKAPADWQQRIVPDETMQACNKYRNDVPHDVGDAIMKREIT
RVAYPADGKFLGDWKAGAKIANNGQGGQFSDKPETVHGGNCYACHQMAKSEVSFGTLGPS
LTHYGKDRNYTEAEIKQAYTKIYNSQAVVPCSNMPRFGTNGFLTEQQIKDVMAFLFDPES
PVNKE
NT seq
738 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgatgaagttgcatgtttcgatgctggcgctcgccctcggcggcgcgctgtgctgcacg
gcgccgggtctcagccgggccgccgatcaggcgatccccgccaaaccggccggcccgatg
agcaaagcggcggacaaggctgcgaagccggcggccgcaccggcccccgccaagaccgcg
gcggccgcatcgacggtctcgaccgacaccgtcgacgcctacatcaaggcgaccttcggc
aaggcgccggcagactggcagcaacgcatcgtccccgacgagacgatgcaggcctgcaac
aaatatcgcaacgacgtgccgcacgatgtcggcgacgccatcatgaagcgcgagatcacc
agggtggcgtatccggccgacggcaagttcctcggcgactggaaggccggcgccaagatc
gccaacaacggccagggcggccagttctccgacaagccggaaacggtgcatggcggcaat
tgctacgcctgccaccagatggccaaatccgaagtgtcgttcggcacgctcggcccgagc
ctcactcactacggcaaggaccgcaactacacagaagccgagatcaagcaggcctacacc
aagatctacaactcgcaggcggtggtgccgtgctcgaacatgccgcggttcggcaccaac
ggtttcctcaccgaacagcagatcaaggacgtgatggcgttcctgttcgatccggaatcc
ccggtgaacaaggaatag
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system