KEGG   Thalassobaculum sp. OXR-137: T8K17_17425
Entry
T8K17_17425       CDS       T09627                                 
Name
(GenBank) enoyl-CoA hydratase-related protein
  KO
K01661  naphthoate synthase [EC:4.1.3.36]
Organism
thar  Thalassobaculum sp. OXR-137
Pathway
thar00130  Ubiquinone and other terpenoid-quinone biosynthesis
thar01100  Metabolic pathways
thar01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
thar01240  Biosynthesis of cofactors
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:thar00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
   00130 Ubiquinone and other terpenoid-quinone biosynthesis
    T8K17_17425
Enzymes [BR:thar01000]
 4. Lyases
  4.1  Carbon-carbon lyases
   4.1.3  Oxo-acid-lyases
    4.1.3.36  1,4-dihydroxy-2-naphthoyl-CoA synthase
     T8K17_17425
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: ECH_1 ECH_2
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: WPZ33015
LinkDB
Position
3767128..3767913
AA seq 261 aa
MSQTFETILYEEDGPIGWITINRPEDGNMFTPVTCIEIRDCIEAIRRETRTRVVVLTGAG
EKFFCIGGRKDGMEDTTLYAGVLPTLEMYDAIDKLQKPVIAMVNGFAVGGGNVLHTVCDL
TIAKESAVFRQVGPMMGSFDAGYGTWYLEDAIGKKRAKEMWYTNRKLSAAEALDWGLINK
VVPDDKLREETRAWALSISERGPMALAGIKHAFLARHGGVGGLGRVSHDMLLKLYLKTEE
SQELSKAFGERRTPDPDKFGH
NT seq 786 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgtcccagacgttcgagaccatcctgtacgaggaagacggccccatcggctggatcacc
atcaaccggccggaagacgggaacatgttcacccccgtcacctgtatcgagatccgcgac
tgtatcgaggcgatccgccgcgagacccgcacccgcgtggtggtgctaacaggggcgggc
gagaagttcttctgcatcggcggccgcaaggacggcatggaggacaccactctctatgcc
ggcgtgcttccgacgcttgagatgtacgacgccatcgacaagctgcagaagccggtgatc
gccatggtcaacggtttcgcggtcggcggcggcaacgtgctgcacacggtctgcgacctc
accatcgccaaggaaagcgcggtgtttcgccaggtcggcccgatgatgggcagcttcgac
gccggctacggtacttggtatctggaggacgccatcggcaagaagcgggcgaaggagatg
tggtacacaaaccgcaagctttccgccgccgaggcgcttgactggggtctgatcaacaag
gtggtgccggacgacaagttgcgcgaggagacccgcgcctgggcactgtcgatctccgag
cgcggcccgatggccctggccggcatcaagcacgccttcctcgcgcgtcatggcggtgtc
ggcggtctcggccgcgtctcccacgacatgctgctgaagctgtacctgaagaccgaggag
agccaggagctgtccaaggccttcggcgagcgccgcacgcccgatccggacaagttcggc
cactga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system