KEGG   Sturnus vulgaris (common starling): 106858171
Entry
106858171         CDS       T08833                                 
Symbol
PTS
Name
(RefSeq) 6-pyruvoyl tetrahydrobiopterin synthase
  KO
K01737  6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin/6-carboxytetrahydropterin synthase [EC:4.2.3.12 4.1.2.50]
Organism
svg  Sturnus vulgaris (common starling)
Pathway
svg00790  Folate biosynthesis
svg01100  Metabolic pathways
svg01240  Biosynthesis of cofactors
Module
svg_M00842  Tetrahydrobiopterin biosynthesis, GTP => BH4
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:svg00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
   00790 Folate biosynthesis
    106858171 (PTS)
 09180 Brite Hierarchies
  09182 Protein families: genetic information processing
   03016 Transfer RNA biogenesis [BR:svg03016]
    106858171 (PTS)
Enzymes [BR:svg01000]
 4. Lyases
  4.1  Carbon-carbon lyases
   4.1.2  Aldehyde-lyases
    4.1.2.50  6-carboxytetrahydropterin synthase
     106858171 (PTS)
  4.2  Carbon-oxygen lyases
   4.2.3  Acting on phosphates
    4.2.3.12  6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase
     106858171 (PTS)
Transfer RNA biogenesis [BR:svg03016]
 Prokaryotic type
  tRNA modification factors
   Other tRNA modification factors
    106858171 (PTS)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: PTPS FlgE_3rd
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID: 106858171
NCBI-ProteinID: XP_014740169
LinkDB
Position
Unknown
AA seq 147 aa
MSPRSARLARLSRSVTFSACHRLHSKSLSDEENLKLFGKCNNPNGHGHNYKVVVTVRGEI
DPVSGMVMNLTDLKEYMQEAIMEPLDHKNLDKDVPYFSEVVSTTENIAVFIWDSLQELLP
QGILYKVEVHETEQNVVVYKGEETIVK
NT seq 444 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgtcgccgcgctccgcccgcctggcgcggctgtcgcgctccgtcaccttcagcgcctgc
catcgcctgcacagcaaatccctgagtgatgaggagaacctgaagctgtttgggaaatgc
aacaacccaaatgggcacggacacaactacaaagttgtggtcaccgtgcgtggagagatt
gacccagtctcggggatggtgatgaacctgacagacctgaaggaatacatgcaggaagcg
atcatggagccactggaccacaaaaacctggacaaggacgtgccctacttctctgaggtg
gtgagcaccacagagaacattgccgtgttcatctgggacagcctccaggagctcctgccc
cagggaatcctctacaaagtggaagtgcacgagacagagcagaacgtggtcgtttacaag
ggggaggaaaccattgtgaagtga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system