KEGG   Sphingomonas sanguinis: KV697_16465
Entry
KV697_16465       CDS       T09609                                 
Name
(GenBank) phosphoadenylyl-sulfate reductase
  KO
K00390  phosphoadenosine phosphosulfate reductase [EC:1.8.4.8 1.8.4.10]
Organism
ssag  Sphingomonas sanguinis
Pathway
ssag00920  Sulfur metabolism
ssag01100  Metabolic pathways
ssag01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
ssag01320  Sulfur cycle
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:ssag00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09102 Energy metabolism
   00920 Sulfur metabolism
    KV697_16465
Enzymes [BR:ssag01000]
 1. Oxidoreductases
  1.8  Acting on a sulfur group of donors
   1.8.4  With a disulfide as acceptor
    1.8.4.8  phosphoadenylyl-sulfate reductase (thioredoxin)
     KV697_16465
    1.8.4.10  adenylyl-sulfate reductase (thioredoxin)
     KV697_16465
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: PAPS_reduct
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: QXT35323
LinkDB
Position
complement(3516299..3517045)
AA seq 248 aa
MAERALDRIDVRPTYTDEDAASYDARFASVPAPDMLRTLLVGELHGQIAVVSSFGTESAV
LLHMVAQADPATPVVFTDTLKMFPETLAYRDTLVERLGLLDVRVIRPAPALLAAKDPDGI
RHGYDPDGCCDLRKVEPLARGLAPFEAWISGRKGFQAGTRRALPRFEVEDGRLKLNPLAD
WDKAALDDYFAAHNLPRHPLEAEGYLSIGCAPCTSKVKPGEDPRSGRWRGFDKVECGIHR
PVEAVRPS
NT seq 747 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atggctgagcgtgcgctcgaccggatagacgtgcggccgacctatacggacgaggatgcg
gcctcatatgatgcgcgcttcgctagcgtgcccgcgccggacatgctgcgcaccctgctg
gtcggagagctgcacgggcagatcgcggtggtttcgtccttcggcaccgagtctgcggta
ctgctgcacatggtcgcacaggccgatccggcgaccccggtagtgttcactgatacgctg
aagatgtttcccgagacgttggcctatcgcgacacgctggtcgagcggctgggcctgctc
gacgttcgtgtgatccgccccgcccccgcattgctggcggcaaaggacccggacggcatc
cgccacggatacgaccccgatggctgctgcgacctgcgcaaggtcgagccgctcgcgcgt
ggtctcgcgccgttcgaggcatggatttcgggccgcaagggcttccaggcgggcacccgc
cgcgccctgccccgcttcgaggtcgaggatggtcggttgaagctcaacccgctggcggac
tgggacaaggcggcgctggacgactattttgcggcccataacctgccccgtcatccgctg
gaggccgaaggctatctgtcgatcggatgtgcgccctgcaccagcaaggtgaaacccggc
gaagacccccgttccggccgctggcgtggcttcgacaaggtggaatgcgggatacaccgg
ccggtcgaagctgttcgaccgagctaa

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