Vibrio campbellii ATCC BAA-1116: VIBHAR_07040
Help
Entry
VIBHAR_07040 CDS
T00589
Name
(GenBank) hypothetical protein
KO
K01497
GTP cyclohydrolase II [EC:
3.5.4.25
]
Organism
vha
Vibrio campbellii ATCC BAA-1116
Pathway
vha00740
Riboflavin metabolism
vha00790
Folate biosynthesis
vha01100
Metabolic pathways
vha01110
Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
vha01240
Biosynthesis of cofactors
vha02024
Quorum sensing
Module
vha_M00125
Riboflavin biosynthesis, plants and bacteria, GTP => riboflavin/FMN/FAD
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
vha00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
00740 Riboflavin metabolism
VIBHAR_07040
00790 Folate biosynthesis
VIBHAR_07040
09140 Cellular Processes
09145 Cellular community - prokaryotes
02024 Quorum sensing
VIBHAR_07040
Enzymes [BR:
vha01000
]
3. Hydrolases
3.5 Acting on carbon-nitrogen bonds, other than peptide bonds
3.5.4 In cyclic amidines
3.5.4.25 GTP cyclohydrolase II
VIBHAR_07040
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
GTP_cyclohydro2
PFam54_60
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ABU74914
UniProt:
A7N823
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
II:complement(2115294..2115851)
Genome browser
AA seq
185 aa
AA seq
DB search
MFIMHGFIENATGKEHLALVYGDLARNEAPLIRLHSECLTSDALLSTRCDCGFQINRTLQ
NIVEEGCGVLLYLCQEGRGIGFINKIRAYHLQDEGADTVEANERLGFAADMRDYAFYKGI
LGYLGINKVRLMTNNLRKLAALKKVNINVVERVPLQESNNLNQHYLQTKANRLGHMLDAK
FVEQD
NT seq
558 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgtttatcatgcatggttttatcgagaacgcgacaggaaaagagcacttagcgcttgtg
tatggtgacctagccagaaatgaagccccgttgattcgtttgcactcagagtgtttaacc
agcgatgcgctgctcagtacgcgttgtgattgtggattccagattaatcgtacgttgcaa
aatattgtcgaagaaggctgtggtgtgctgctctatttgtgccaagagggtaggggaatt
ggcttcatcaataagattcgtgcgtatcacttacaagatgaaggcgcagacactgtcgaa
gccaatgagcgcctgggctttgctgctgatatgcgtgattacgcgttttataaagggata
ttgggatatcttggaatcaataaagtacgtttgatgaccaacaatctacgcaagcttgca
gcgttgaagaaggtaaacatcaatgtggttgagcgggtaccactgcaagaaagcaataac
ctaaatcaacactaccttcaaaccaaagccaataggcttggccacatgttagacgccaaa
tttgtcgaacaagattaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system