Sphingomonas aerolata: NEF64_17665
Help
Entry
NEF64_17665 CDS
T08450
Name
(GenBank) DJ-1/PfpI family protein
KO
K18199
cyclohexyl-isocyanide hydratase [EC:
4.2.1.103
]
Organism
saer
Sphingomonas aerolata
Pathway
saer00930
Caprolactam degradation
saer01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
saer00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
00930 Caprolactam degradation
NEF64_17665
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09181 Protein families: metabolism
01002 Peptidases and inhibitors [BR:
saer01002
]
NEF64_17665
Enzymes [BR:
saer01000
]
4. Lyases
4.2 Carbon-oxygen lyases
4.2.1 Hydro-lyases
4.2.1.103 cyclohexyl-isocyanide hydratase
NEF64_17665
Peptidases and inhibitors [BR:
saer01002
]
Cysteine peptidases
Family C56: PfpI endopeptidase family
NEF64_17665
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
DJ-1_PfpI
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
USR00182
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(3859350..3860042)
Genome browser
AA seq
230 aa
AA seq
DB search
MRDPLRIAFLLFPNVTQLDLTGPAQILSRLGEAQVDLVWKTRDPVPTDAGFSILPTAIFA
EVPYADILCVPGGFGLNDVIADDEAMAWVGAVGAGATWVTSVCTGSLILGAAGLLDGYRA
GCHWAQRDMLPLFGAIPVDARTVVDRNRVTGGGVTAGIDFALTLIALIRGEAHARMVQLA
LEYDPQPPFDSGSPAQAGPEIVAAYQRRVQALAPTRDEDLRALARRRGYG
NT seq
693 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgcgcgaccctcttcgtatcgccttcctgctgtttcccaacgtcacccagctcgacctc
accggtcctgcccagatcctgtcgcggcttggcgaggcgcaggtcgatcttgtctggaag
acgcgcgatccggtgccaaccgacgccgggttttcgatccttccgaccgcgatctttgcc
gaggtgccgtacgcggacatcctttgcgtcccgggaggcttcggactcaacgacgtcatc
gccgacgacgaagcgatggcatgggtgggggccgtcggggcaggcgcgacatgggtcacc
agtgtctgcaccggctcgttgatcctcggtgccgcgggattgctcgacgggtaccgcgcg
gggtgccactgggctcagcgtgacatgttgccgctcttcggtgcgatccccgtcgacgcg
cgcaccgtggtcgatcggaaccgagtcaccggcggcggtgtgacggcgggcatcgacttt
gcgctgacgctgatcgcgctgatccgcggcgaggcgcatgcacgcatggtgcaattggcg
ctcgaatatgatccccagccaccgtttgacagcggctcacccgcacaggccggtccggag
atcgtcgccgcgtaccagcgccgtgtgcaggcgttggcaccgacgcgtgacgaagacctg
cgcgcgcttgcccggcgtcgtggttacgggtga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system