Yersinia aldovae: AT01_2175
Help
Entry
AT01_2175 CDS
T03605
Name
(GenBank) thiazole biosynthesis ThiG family protein
KO
K03149
thiazole synthase [EC:
2.8.1.10
]
Organism
yal
Yersinia aldovae
Pathway
yal00730
Thiamine metabolism
yal01100
Metabolic pathways
yal01240
Biosynthesis of cofactors
Module
yal_M00127
Thiamine biosynthesis, prokaryotes, AIR (+ DXP/tyrosine) => TMP/TPP
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
yal00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
00730 Thiamine metabolism
AT01_2175
Enzymes [BR:
yal01000
]
2. Transferases
2.8 Transferring sulfur-containing groups
2.8.1 Sulfurtransferases
2.8.1.10 thiazole synthase
AT01_2175
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
ThiG
His_biosynth
FMN_dh
NanE
IMPDH
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AJJ64508
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
2347482..2348270
Genome browser
AA seq
262 aa
AA seq
DB search
MLKIADTTFTSRLFTGTGKFATAELMLEALRASGSQLITMAMKRVDLRAGNDAILAPLRQ
LGVRLLPNTSGAKTAQEAVFAARLAREALGTHWVKLEIHPDVKYLLPDPIETLKAAEILV
KEGFVVLPYCGADPVLCKRLEEVGCAAVMPLGAPIGSNLGLRTRDFLQIIIEQAKVPVVV
DAGIGAPSHALEAIELGADAVLVNTAIAVARSPVHMAHAFRLAVESGELARQAGLGNQQF
GKAIATSPLTGFLSQLEEENHV
NT seq
789 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgctgaagatcgccgataccacttttacctcacgtttatttaccggtacgggcaaattt
gccacggctgaattgatgctggaagcactacgcgcctccggttcacaactgataacgatg
gcgatgaaacgagtagatttacgggcgggtaacgatgccattcttgcgccgttgcgccag
ctaggcgtgcgcttactgcctaatacctcgggggctaaaactgcgcaagaagctgtattt
gctgcccgtctggcgcgcgaagcactgggtacccattgggtaaaattggaaattcatccg
gatgtgaagtatttactgcccgatccaatagaaaccctgaaagctgccgaaatactggtg
aaagagggatttgtggttctgccttactgcggcgcagacccggtattgtgcaaacggctg
gaagaagtcggctgtgcggccgtcatgccattgggggcaccgattggatcaaatttaggc
ttacgtactcgcgactttctgcaaattattatcgagcaggccaaagtacccgtggtggtc
gatgctggaattggtgcgccaagccatgcacttgaagctatagaactaggcgctgatgct
gttctggtgaataccgcgatagctgttgcgcgctcaccggtgcacatggcgcatgctttc
cgtttggcggttgaatccggtgaattggcgcgtcaggctgggcttggcaaccaacagttt
ggcaaggccattgccaccagcccactgactggctttctcagccagcttgaggaagaaaat
catgtctga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system