Raphanus sativus (radish): 108840608
Help
Entry
108840608 CDS
T06014
Name
(RefSeq) dehydrodolichyl diphosphate synthase 5-like
KO
K11778
ditrans,polycis-polyprenyl diphosphate synthase [EC:
2.5.1.87
]
Organism
rsz
Raphanus sativus (radish)
Pathway
rsz00900
Terpenoid backbone biosynthesis
rsz01110
Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
rsz00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09109 Metabolism of terpenoids and polyketides
00900 Terpenoid backbone biosynthesis
108840608
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09181 Protein families: metabolism
01006 Prenyltransferases [BR:
rsz01006
]
108840608
Enzymes [BR:
rsz01000
]
2. Transferases
2.5 Transferring alkyl or aryl groups, other than methyl groups
2.5.1 Transferring alkyl or aryl groups, other than methyl groups (only sub-subclass identified to date)
2.5.1.87 ditrans,polycis-polyprenyl diphosphate synthase [(2E,6E)-farnesyl diphosphate specific]
108840608
Prenyltransferases [BR:
rsz01006
]
Terpene biosynthesis
Prenyl diphosphate synthase
108840608
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Prenyltransf
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
108840608
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_056848605
UniProt:
A0A9W3CAQ4
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
2:21551725..21554119
Genome browser
AA seq
169 aa
AA seq
DB search
MEQMVYIVSVVFTCLALLIIPVIFVTRRLSVHLSFKNILRFIKLVASQLDDEEENNEKGG
TMGEEEKRRRLPKHVAIILDGNRRWAEKRGLGTSEGHQAGARRLIENAKDCFAMGINTVS
LFAFSTENWARPEDEVNGLMALFEKHLRSEMAFFQRYSTSYFDPFIKSY
NT seq
510 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggaacaaatggtgtatatagtctctgttgttttcacttgtcttgctcttcttatcatc
cctgttatcttcgtaactcggcgtctaagtgttcatctctccttcaaaaacatcctcaga
ttcattaaactcgtagcttctcaactcgatgatgaggaagagaataacgagaaaggtggt
acaatgggagaggaagagaaacgacggagactgccaaagcacgtggcgattatattggac
ggaaacagacgttgggcggagaaacgaggactcggaacatcggaaggtcaccaggccgga
gcgaggaggcttatcgagaatgctaaagactgtttcgctatggggataaacactgtctca
ctctttgctttctccaccgaaaattgggcaagacctgaggatgaagttaacggcctgatg
gccttgtttgagaaacatttgaggtctgagatggctttcttccaaaggtactcaacatct
tactttgatccttttattaaaagctattag
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system