KEGG   Symbiopectobacterium purcellii: K6K13_12725
Entry
K6K13_12725       CDS       T07463                                 
Name
(GenBank) phosphotransferase
  KO
K07251  thiamine kinase [EC:2.7.1.89]
Organism
sym  Symbiopectobacterium purcellii
Pathway
sym00730  Thiamine metabolism
sym01100  Metabolic pathways
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:sym00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
   00730 Thiamine metabolism
    K6K13_12725
Enzymes [BR:sym01000]
 2. Transferases
  2.7  Transferring phosphorus-containing groups
   2.7.1  Phosphotransferases with an alcohol group as acceptor
    2.7.1.89  thiamine kinase
     K6K13_12725
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: APH Choline_kinase
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: QZN94236
LinkDB
Position
complement(2715089..2715955)
AA seq 288 aa
MVPSNSKVALERLLAQHFPAVDTAGFHFDAVNGSGRGCWRVRVGDRQLLARPQTTGAAQL
GVFRQREYRVLRQLSARQLAPKPVVYRDGWLIVEWAEGTTTSAQDFSCVLENGSLSQLLS
QLHRLPCCGFRLNLPMQFTHHWQNMDPRRRSPALLRWHHHFQRKAPPDLLAWAPLHLDVH
SENVLITPQGSLLLIDWEYAADGDIGLELALLVRGNGLDVESQRHLLRTYQQQRPGLCAQ
ALNASVQQWLPWADYLILMWCEVCWHQTGQTAFLAAGSASRRALGLNV
NT seq 867 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atggtgccgtccaacagtaaagtggcgcttgaacgtctgcttgcgcaacactttccggcg
gtcgataccgccggttttcatttcgatgccgtgaacggttcgggacgcggttgctggcgc
gttcgcgtgggtgatcgtcaactgctggcgcggccgcaaaccaccggggcagcgcagctc
ggtgtcttcaggcagcgtgaataccgggtgttacgtcaactctcagcacggcagcttgcc
cctaaacctgttgtataccgcgacggctggctcattgtggaatgggccgaagggacgacg
acgtctgcgcaggatttttcctgcgtattggaaaacggatcgctgtcacaactgctcagc
caacttcatcgcctaccgtgttgtggttttcgtttgaatttgccgatgcagtttacccac
cattggcaaaacatggatccgcgtcggcgctcgcctgcgctgttgcgctggcaccaccat
tttcagcgtaaagctccgcctgacttgctcgcgtgggcacctttgcatcttgacgtgcat
agcgaaaatgtcttgatcacgccgcaggggtcgctgctgcttatcgattgggaatacgct
gccgatggtgacattggactggaactggcgctgctggtgcgtggcaacggacttgatgtt
gagtcacaacggcacttgctgcgaacctaccaacagcagcgcccggggttgtgcgcgcag
gcattgaacgcatcggttcaacagtggctgccctgggccgattatcttattctgatgtgg
tgtgaggtgtgctggcatcaaacgggacaaacggcgtttttagcggcaggttctgcatcg
cgtcgtgctctcggacttaatgtgtaa

DBGET integrated database retrieval system