Shigella dysenteriae 1617 (serotype 1): Asd1617_05187
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Entry
Asd1617_05187 CDS
T02933
Name
(GenBank) DTDP-4-amino-4,6-dideoxy-D-glucose N-acetyltransferase
KO
K16704
dTDP-4-amino-4,6-dideoxy-D-galactose acyltransferase [EC:
2.3.1.210
]
Organism
sdz
Shigella dysenteriae 1617 (serotype 1)
Pathway
sdz00541
O-Antigen nucleotide sugar biosynthesis
sdz01100
Metabolic pathways
sdz01250
Biosynthesis of nucleotide sugars
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
sdz00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09107 Glycan biosynthesis and metabolism
00541 O-Antigen nucleotide sugar biosynthesis
Asd1617_05187
Enzymes [BR:
sdz01000
]
2. Transferases
2.3 Acyltransferases
2.3.1 Transferring groups other than aminoacyl groups
2.3.1.210 dTDP-4-amino-4,6-dideoxy-D-galactose acyltransferase
Asd1617_05187
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Motif
Pfam:
Acetyltransf_1
Acetyltransf_3
Acetyltransf_CG
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AHA68014
UniProt:
A0A0A7A1T2
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Position
complement(3636829..3637503)
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AA seq
224 aa
AA seq
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MPVRASIEPLTWENAFFGVNSAIVRITSEAPLLTPDALAPWSRVQAKIAASNTGELDALQ
QLGFSLVEGEVDLALPVNNVSDSGAVVAQETDIPALRQLASAAFAQSRFRAPWYAPDASG
RFYAQWIENAVRGIFDHQCLILRSASGDIRGYVSLRELNATDVRIGLLAGRGAGAELMQT
ALNWAYARGKTTLRVATQMGNTAALKRYIQSGANVESTAYWLYR
NT seq
675 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
gtgcccgtccgcgccagtattgagccactaacctgggaaaatgccttctttggtgttaac
agcgccatcgtgcgcattacttctgaagcaccgctcctgacgccagacgcgttagcgccg
tggtcacgggtgcaggccaaaattgcggcatcaaatacgggtgaactggatgccctgcaa
cagctgggattctcccttgtcgaaggtgaagttgatttggcgctacccgtgaacaatgtc
agtgatagcggtgcagtagtggcacaagagaccgatattcctgcattacgtcagttagcc
agcgccgcatttgcgcaaagccgttttcgtgcgccgtggtatgcgcctgacgccagcggt
cgcttttatgcgcagtggattgaaaatgccgtgcgcggcatctttgatcatcaatgtctg
attttacgttcggcgtccggtgatattcgcggctatgtctctttacgggagctcaatgcg
acagatgtgcgaattggcctgctggctggacgcggtgctggtgctgagctgatgcaaaca
gcgctaaactgggcgtatgctcgcggtaaaacaactttgcgggtggcgacccaaatgggc
aacaccgccgcgcttaaacgatacatacaaagtggtgcgaatgtagaaagcaccgcgtac
tggttatacaggtga
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