Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803: slr1717
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Entry
slr1717 CDS
T00004
Name
(GenBank) hypothetical protein
KO
K06864
pyridinium-3,5-biscarboxylic acid mononucleotide sulfurtransferase [EC:
4.4.1.37
]
Organism
syn
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
syn00001
]
09190 Not Included in Pathway or Brite
09191 Unclassified: metabolism
99980 Enzymes with EC numbers
slr1717
Enzymes [BR:
syn01000
]
4. Lyases
4.4 Carbon-sulfur lyases
4.4.1 Carbon-sulfur lyases (only sub-subclass identified to date)
4.4.1.37 pyridinium-3,5-bisthiocarboxylic acid mononucleotide synthase
slr1717
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GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
NAD_synthase
DUF7411
Asn_synthase
QueC
Arginosuc_synth
ATP_bind_3
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
BAA17905
UniProt:
P73846
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Position
1468153..1468959
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AA seq
268 aa
AA seq
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MLESKLENLRQFFGELDRALIAYSGGVDSTLVAKVAYDVLGQNAVAITAVSPSLLPEELE
DAQAQAQWIGIAHELVQTNEMANPNYTANPENRCYFCKSELHDTLQPLALALGYNYVIDG
VNGDDLRDYRPGIQAAKERGGRSPLAELQISKLEVRQISQLLGLPWWDKPAQPCLSSRFP
YGEEITVEKLQRVGRAEIYLRRLGYNQVRVRSEQNLARIELPPEQIQQFVQDVSLGELVQ
TFQNFGFLYVTLDLEGYQSGKLNRVLTK
NT seq
807 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgttagaaagcaaacttgaaaatctgcggcaattctttggggaactagaccgggcttta
attgcctattccggtggagtggatagtaccctagtggccaaggtagcctacgacgtgttg
gggcaaaatgccgtggctatcaccgccgtttcaccctccctgttaccggaagaattggaa
gatgcccaggcccaagctcaatggattggcattgcccatgaactggtgcaaaccaacgaa
atggctaaccctaattacactgccaacccggaaaatcgttgttatttttgcaaaagtgaa
ctccacgacacccttcagcccttagctttggccctgggttacaactacgttatcgatgga
gtcaatggagatgatctacgggattatcgccccggtatccaagcagctaaggaacggggt
gggcgatcgccattggccgaattgcaaattagcaagttggaagtgcggcaaatttcccag
ttattggggttgccctggtgggataaaccagcccaaccttgtttaagctcccgctttccc
tacggcgaagaaatcacagtggagaaattacagcgggtcggccgggcagaaatttatctg
cgtcgtctcggctataaccaagtccgggtgcgatcggaacaaaatttggcccgcattgaa
ttgcccccggaacagatccaacagtttgtacaggatgtgtccctgggggaattagtgcaa
acttttcaaaactttggtttcctttacgtcaccctagacctagaaggttaccaaagcggc
aagctaaatcgggttttgaccaaataa
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