Thiomonas arsenitoxydans: THI_3562
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Entry
THI_3562 CDS
T02347
Name
(GenBank) putative Enoyl-CoA hydratase, putative membrane protein
KO
K13766
methylglutaconyl-CoA hydratase [EC:
4.2.1.18
]
Organism
thi
Thiomonas arsenitoxydans
Pathway
thi00280
Valine, leucine and isoleucine degradation
thi01100
Metabolic pathways
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
thi00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09105 Amino acid metabolism
00280 Valine, leucine and isoleucine degradation
THI_3562
Enzymes [BR:
thi01000
]
4. Lyases
4.2 Carbon-oxygen lyases
4.2.1 Hydro-lyases
4.2.1.18 methylglutaconyl-CoA hydratase
THI_3562
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SSDB
Ortholog
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Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
ECH_1
ECH_2
Peptidase_S49
Succ_CoA_lig
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
CAZ90145
UniProt:
D6CNL7
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
3469103..3469927
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AA seq
274 aa
AA seq
DB search
MMQQQAYTDSTELRVQVSASGLAVVTLNRTQVHNAFDEAQIARMTKAFEALGTDETVRAV
VLRGAGQHFCAGADIGWMRRAAQADETENIEDARRFSNMMRAVAYCPKPVVAVVQGVAYG
GGMGLACAADIVLAADNARFALTEAKFGILPAVVGPYVVNAIGRRQAMEMALTCRVLSAQ
QALSIGLAHQVVAPEAIDGALLEILRGLLRSGPAALREIKSLFSSLPIRPVDDATSKVTA
QTIARVRATVEASEGFAAFVDKRDPSWVAEPELI
NT seq
825 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgatgcagcagcaggcttacaccgattcaactgaacttcgcgttcaggtaagtgcgtcc
gggctagctgtcgtcactcttaaccgcacgcaggtacacaacgccttcgatgaagcacag
attgcgcgaatgacgaaggcgttcgaggcgctcggcacggatgagacggtgcgtgctgtt
gtgctgcgtggcgcgggtcagcatttctgcgcgggcgctgacatcggttggatgcgccgt
gcagcacaggccgacgaaactgaaaacatcgaggatgcccggcggttctcgaacatgatg
cgcgctgtcgcctattgtccaaaaccagtggtcgcagtggtacaaggcgtggcctacgga
ggtggaatgggactagcctgcgctgccgatatcgtgcttgctgcggacaacgctcggttt
gcgctcaccgaagccaagtttggcatcttgccagcggtggtcggcccatatgtagttaac
gcgataggccgtcgtcaggcgatggaaatggcgctaacttgccgggtgctgtcggcgcaa
caagcgctgtcgattggtctggcacatcaggtcgtcgcgcccgaggcaatcgatggtgcg
ttgctcgagatcttgcgcggtttacttcggagcggtcctgcagcgctgcgcgaaattaag
tcattgtttagcagtctgccgatccggccagtcgacgacgccacttcgaaagtgaccgcg
caaactattgcacgtgtgcgcgcaactgtcgaggcgagtgagggcttcgccgctttcgtc
gacaagcgcgatccgagctgggtcgcagagccggaattgatctga
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