KEGG   Staphylococcus epidermidis ATCC 12228: SE_2081
Entry
SE_2081           CDS       T00110                                 
Name
(GenBank) putative beta-subunit of L-serine dehydratas
  KO
K01752  L-serine dehydratase [EC:4.3.1.17]
Organism
sep  Staphylococcus epidermidis ATCC 12228
Pathway
sep00260  Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism
sep00270  Cysteine and methionine metabolism
sep01100  Metabolic pathways
sep01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
sep01200  Carbon metabolism
sep01230  Biosynthesis of amino acids
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:sep00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09105 Amino acid metabolism
   00260 Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism
    SE_2081
   00270 Cysteine and methionine metabolism
    SE_2081
Enzymes [BR:sep01000]
 4. Lyases
  4.3  Carbon-nitrogen lyases
   4.3.1  Ammonia-lyases
    4.3.1.17  L-serine ammonia-lyase
     SE_2081
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: SDH_beta DUF7486 Methyltransf_20
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: AAO05723
UniProt: A0A0H2VI04
LinkDB
Position
complement(2126532..2127212)
AA seq 226 aa
MAKSYDYQSAFDIIGPVMMGPSSSHTAGAVKIGNSARAVLGDMPKHIEIRYYESFAKTHQ
GHGTDVAIVGGAMGYSTFDSRIKSSLDIAKDENITIDIIEDEGESIGQHPNCAYIKANTK
DGRYIEVIGISIGGGTIKLKGINVNGLNVELNHGLPMLVIDGNMNKAKINHLINDLSDMD
LDLGEELIETNDNEGLVVFPLNKAISESALNIIKDKHSDLNVSYIK
NT seq 681 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atggctaaaagctatgattatcaaagtgctttcgatattattggaccagtaatgatggga
ccttcaagttctcatacagcaggtgcagtaaaaattggtaattcagcgagagctgtgtta
ggagatatgcctaagcatatagaaattcgttattatgaatcttttgctaaaacgcatcaa
gggcatggtacagacgttgctattgtcggtggtgctatgggctacagcactttcgatagt
agaattaaatcatccttagacatagcaaaagatgaaaatattacaattgatattattgaa
gatgaaggagaaagtattggtcaacatcctaactgtgcttatatcaaagcaaatacgaaa
gacggacgttatatagaagtgataggtatttctattggtggcggtacaatcaaactaaaa
ggtatcaatgtaaatggtttaaatgtggaactgaatcatgggcttccaatgttagttata
gatggaaatatgaataaagctaaaataaatcatcttattaatgatttatcagatatggac
ttagacttaggtgaagaattaatagaaacaaatgataatgaaggtttagttgtatttcct
ttaaataaagcaatctcagaatcagcattaaatattattaaagataaacatagtgattta
aacgtttcctatatcaaatag

DBGET integrated database retrieval system