KEGG   Serratia sp. SCBI: SERRSCBI_01290
Entry
SERRSCBI_01290    CDS       T03314                                 
Symbol
thiG
Name
(GenBank) thiazole synthase
  KO
K03149  thiazole synthase [EC:2.8.1.10]
Organism
sers  Serratia sp. SCBI
Pathway
sers00730  Thiamine metabolism
sers01100  Metabolic pathways
sers01240  Biosynthesis of cofactors
Module
sers_M00127  Thiamine biosynthesis, prokaryotes, AIR (+ DXP/tyrosine) => TMP/TPP
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:sers00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
   00730 Thiamine metabolism
    SERRSCBI_01290 (thiG)
Enzymes [BR:sers01000]
 2. Transferases
  2.8  Transferring sulfur-containing groups
   2.8.1  Sulfurtransferases
    2.8.1.10  thiazole synthase
     SERRSCBI_01290 (thiG)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: ThiG His_biosynth FMN_dh NanE IMPDH
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: AIM19897
LinkDB
Position
complement(299292..300071)
AA seq 259 aa
MLKIADTTFTSRLFTGTGKFATPALMLEALAASGSQLVTMAMKRVDLRGGNDAILAPLQQ
LGVRLLPNTSGAKTAAEAVFAARLAREALGTHWVKLEIHPDVKYLLPDPIETLKAAETLV
KDGFVVLPYCGADPVLCKRLEEVGCAAVMPLGAPIGSNRGLRTRDFLEIIIEQAKVPVVV
DAGIGAPSHALEAMELGADAVLVNTAIAVARDPVQMARAFRLALEAGELARSAGLGSSQR
GAVASSPLTAFLSQPEEAQ
NT seq 780 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgctgaaaatcgccgataccacttttacctcgcgcctgttcaccggcaccggcaagttc
gccaccccggcgctgatgttggaggcgctggcggcctccggctcacagctggtgaccatg
gccatgaagcgcgtcgatctgcgcggcggcaacgacgccattttggcgccgctgcaacag
ttgggcgtcaggctgttgcccaatacctctggcgccaaaacggccgccgaagcggtgttc
gccgcccgactggcgcgcgaagcgctcggcacccactgggtgaagctggagatccatccc
gatgtgaaatacctgctgccggatccgatagaaacgctgaaggcggcggaaacgctggtg
aaagacggttttgtggtgctgccctactgcggcgccgatccggtgctgtgcaaacggctg
gaagaagtgggatgcgcagcggtgatgccgctcggcgcccctatcggctccaaccgcggt
ctgcgcacccgtgacttcctcgaaatcatcatcgagcaagccaaggtgccggtggtggta
gacgccggcatcggcgcgccaagccacgcgctggaagcgatggagctgggcgccgacgcg
gtgctggtgaataccgccatcgccgtggcgcgcgatccggtgcagatggcgcgggcattt
cgcctggcgctggaggccggcgagctggcacgcagcgcaggattaggctccagccagcgc
ggcgcggtcgcgtccagcccgctgaccgctttcctcagccagccagaggaggcgcagtga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system