Antrostomus carolinensis (chuck-will's-widow): 104530024
Help
Entry
104530024 CDS
T08541
Symbol
ST3GAL6
Name
(RefSeq) type 2 lactosamine alpha-2,3-sialyltransferase
KO
K03792
N-acetyllactosaminide alpha-2,3-sialyltransferase (sialyltransferase 10) [EC:
2.4.3.6
]
Organism
acar
Antrostomus carolinensis (chuck-will's-widow)
Pathway
acar00601
Glycosphingolipid biosynthesis - lacto and neolacto series
acar01100
Metabolic pathways
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
acar00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09107 Glycan biosynthesis and metabolism
00601 Glycosphingolipid biosynthesis - lacto and neolacto series
104530024 (ST3GAL6)
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09181 Protein families: metabolism
01003 Glycosyltransferases [BR:
acar01003
]
104530024 (ST3GAL6)
Enzymes [BR:
acar01000
]
2. Transferases
2.4 Glycosyltransferases
2.4.3 Sialyltransferases
2.4.3.6 N-acetyllactosaminide alpha-2,3-sialyltransferase
104530024 (ST3GAL6)
Glycosyltransferases [BR:
acar01003
]
Terminal extension
Sialyltransferase
104530024 (ST3GAL6)
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Glyco_transf_29
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
104530024
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_010172793
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
Unknown
AA seq
185 aa
AA seq
DB search
MNNGPVIGYEDDVGRRTTFRLSYPESIFSDPIHYDPNTTVVLIVFKPRDLKWLWEILGGQ
KISAKGFWKKPALNMIYKSSQIRILDPSITRKTAYEWLRFPTRFPKKEKPKHPTTGLIAI
TLAFHICHEVHLAGFKYDFTDRNSSLHYYGNDTMSQMMQNEYHNINAEQKFLKQLIDKNF
VVNLT
NT seq
558 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgaataatggccctgttatagggtatgaagatgatgttgggaggaggacgactttccgc
ctttcttacccggaatccatcttctcagatcctatccactatgaccctaatacgactgtt
gttctcattgtcttcaaaccacgtgacttgaagtggctttgggagatactaggtggtcag
aaaataagtgctaagggcttttggaagaaaccagctctgaacatgatatataaatctagt
caaatcaggattcttgatcccagcatcaccagaaaaacagcttatgaatggcttcgtttc
ccaacgaggtttcccaaaaaggagaagcccaagcatccaacaacggggctaattgccatc
acactagcatttcacatatgccacgaagtccacctggcaggcttcaagtatgacttcaca
gacagaaacagttctttgcactactacggcaacgacacaatgtcccagatgatgcagaat
gaataccacaacatcaacgctgagcagaaatttttgaagcagcttatagacaagaacttt
gtggtcaacttgacgtga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system