KEGG   Akkermansia massiliensis: J5W79_10575
Entry
J5W79_10575       CDS       T09439                                 
Name
(GenBank) PTS sugar transporter subunit IIA
  KO
K02768  fructose PTS system EIIA component [EC:2.7.1.202]
Organism
amak  Akkermansia massiliensis
Pathway
amak00051  Fructose and mannose metabolism
amak01100  Metabolic pathways
amak01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
amak02060  Phosphotransferase system (PTS)
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:amak00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09101 Carbohydrate metabolism
   00051 Fructose and mannose metabolism
    J5W79_10575
 09130 Environmental Information Processing
  09131 Membrane transport
   02060 Phosphotransferase system (PTS)
    J5W79_10575
 09180 Brite Hierarchies
  09183 Protein families: signaling and cellular processes
   02000 Transporters [BR:amak02000]
    J5W79_10575
Enzymes [BR:amak01000]
 2. Transferases
  2.7  Transferring phosphorus-containing groups
   2.7.1  Phosphotransferases with an alcohol group as acceptor
    2.7.1.202  protein-Npi-phosphohistidine---D-fructose phosphotransferase
     J5W79_10575
Transporters [BR:amak02000]
 Phosphotransferase system (PTS)
  Enzyme II [TC:4.A]
   Fructose-specific II component
    J5W79_10575
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: PTS_EIIA_2
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: QWP72787
LinkDB
Position
complement(2545574..2546017)
AA seq 147 aa
MADNLQIHVRTFQPATTQEQALETLTDSMAEVLDERQLRHIKNAVLLREETQTTYLDHGL
AVPHGRTSALDSMQVTVGISPEGVLWPDDARNAHLIVMLGVPTAMVTGYLTTMQKLLRWH
KNAPLGPNGEWTGDEASLLASLQHALQ
NT seq 444 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
gtggcagacaatcttcaaattcacgtacgcacgttccagcccgcaaccactcaggaacag
gctctggaaaccttgacggattccatggcggaagtccttgacgaacgtcagctaaggcac
atcaagaatgcggtccttctgcgcgaggaaacgcaaaccacctatctggaccacggcctg
gccgtcccccacgggcgcaccagcgcgctggactccatgcaagtcaccgtaggcatcagt
ccggaaggcgtcctctggccggatgacgcacgcaatgcccacctcatcgtgatgctgggc
gttcccaccgccatggtgaccggctacctgaccaccatgcagaagctgctgcggtggcat
aaaaacgctcccctgggccccaacggggaatggacgggagacgaagccagcctgctggcg
tcccttcaacacgccctgcaatga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system