Streptococcus gordonii: SGO_0885
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Entry
SGO_0885 CDS
T00594
Name
(GenBank) cobyric acid synthase
KO
K07009
lipid II isoglutaminyl synthase (glutamine-hydrolysing) [EC:
6.3.5.13
]
Organism
sgo
Streptococcus gordonii
Pathway
sgo00550
Peptidoglycan biosynthesis
sgo01100
Metabolic pathways
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
sgo00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09107 Glycan biosynthesis and metabolism
00550 Peptidoglycan biosynthesis
SGO_0885
Enzymes [BR:
sgo01000
]
6. Ligases
6.3 Forming carbon-nitrogen bonds
6.3.5 Carbon-nitrogen ligases with glutamine as amido-N-donor
6.3.5.13 lipid II isoglutaminyl synthase (glutamine-hydrolysing)
SGO_0885
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Motif
Pfam:
GATase_3
DJ-1_PfpI
GATase
GATase_5
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ABV10173
UniProt:
A8AWM1
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All DBs
Position
complement(931141..931926)
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AA seq
261 aa
AA seq
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MVYTSLTSLDNQDFRYDIKIAHLYGDLMNTYGDNGNVLMLKYVAEKLGARVQVDIVSLED
GFDKDSYDIVFFGGGQDYEQTIVARDLPAKKDALENFINENGVVLAICGGFQLLGKYYIE
ASGRRIEGLGIMGHYTLNQTNNRYIGDIKIHNDEFNETYYGFENHQGRTFLSDDEKPLGK
VVYGNGNNQEDGCEGVHYKNVFGSYFHGPILSRNANLAYRLVTTALKNKYGSDIKLAAYE
DILAQEIPEEYGDIKSKAEFE
NT seq
786 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atggtttatacttccctcacttctcttgataaccaggatttccgttacgatattaaaatt
gcccatctttatggagatctcatgaatacttatggagataatggaaatgtgctcatgctc
aaatatgtagcagaaaagttaggtgctagagttcaagtcgatatcgtctctctagaagat
ggttttgacaaggacagctacgacatcgtcttctttggtggtggccaagactatgaacaa
acgatcgtagctcgtgacttaccagctaaaaaggatgccttagaaaattttatcaacgaa
aatggcgtagtgttagctatctgcggtggttttcaactcttgggaaaatactatatcgaa
gcatccggtcgacggatcgaaggattaggcatcatgggacattacaccctcaatcagact
aataatcgttacattggcgacatcaagattcataatgatgaattcaatgagacctactac
ggctttgaaaatcaccaaggacgtaccttcctctctgacgacgaaaaacctctgggcaag
gtcgtctatggaaatggcaacaaccaagaggatggttgcgaaggcgttcattataaaaat
gtctttggttcctacttccatggccccatcttgtcccgcaacgcaaacttggcctaccgt
ctggtaacaacagcactgaaaaacaagtatggctcagatattaaactggcggcttatgaa
gatatcctagcccaagaaatcccagaagaatacggagatatcaaaagcaaggctgaattt
gaataa
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