Spiribacter roseus: BBH56_02575
Help
Entry
BBH56_02575 CDS
T06143
Name
(GenBank) phosphoglycolate phosphatase
KO
K22292
N-acetyl-D-muramate 6-phosphate phosphatase [EC:
3.1.3.105
]
Organism
sros
Spiribacter roseus
Pathway
sros00520
Amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism
sros01100
Metabolic pathways
sros01250
Biosynthesis of nucleotide sugars
Module
sros_M00996
UDP-MurNAc biosynthesis, anhMurNAc => UDP-MurNAc
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
sros00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09107 Glycan biosynthesis and metabolism
00520 Amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism
BBH56_02575
Enzymes [BR:
sros01000
]
3. Hydrolases
3.1 Acting on ester bonds
3.1.3 Phosphoric-monoester hydrolases
3.1.3.105 N-acetyl-D-muramate 6-phosphate phosphatase
BBH56_02575
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
HAD_2
Hydrolase
Hydrolase_like
HAD
Hydrolase_6
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AUB78102
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(511415..512122)
Genome browser
AA seq
235 aa
AA seq
DB search
MTAATGERAHGVLLDLDGTMLDTAPDLIDSLNRLRGEQGLAPMADAEFLHAVGHGSIPMI
ARGFNRHPGDAGFDALRERFLAIYAESVSRRTRPYAGMEATLQALEAAAIPWGIVTNKPG
WLTTPLLADLGYAGRPACVVTGDDLARRKPHPYQITEAARQLDLPASACLVVGDTERDIR
AGHQAGALTVVALYGYLSGDDHVEHWGADGLIGQPAELLRWVADPAAPHRQAIAV
NT seq
708 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgacggccgccaccggggagcgcgctcatggcgtgctgctggacctggacgggacaatg
ctcgacacggcaccggatctgatcgacagcctcaaccggctgcgcggcgaacagggactg
gcgccgatggccgatgcggaattcctgcatgcggtcgggcacggcagcatcccgatgatt
gcccgcggcttcaaccgtcatcccggcgatgccgggttcgatgccctgcgcgagcggttt
ctggcgatctatgccgaatcggtcagtcgccgcacacgcccctatgcaggcatggaggca
accctgcaagccctcgaggcggcggccattccctggggcatcgtcaccaataagccgggc
tggctgaccactccgctgctggcggatctgggctatgccggccggccggcctgcgtggtc
accggcgacgacctggcgcggcgcaagccccatccctaccagatcaccgaggcggcccgg
cagcttgatctgcccgcctcggcctgtctggtggtgggcgacaccgagcgcgacatccgc
gccggccatcaggccggcgcgctgaccgtggtggcgctttacggctacctgagtggcgac
gatcatgtcgagcactggggtgccgatggcctgatcggccagcccgccgagctgctgcgc
tgggtggccgatccggcagcgccccaccgtcaagccatcgcggtctag
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system