KEGG   Burkholderia cenocepacia H111: I35_7180
Entry
I35_7180          CDS       T03804                                 
Name
(GenBank) 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase
  KO
K01607  4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase [EC:4.1.1.44]
Organism
bceo  Burkholderia cenocepacia H111
Pathway
bceo00362  Benzoate degradation
bceo01100  Metabolic pathways
bceo01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
bceo01220  Degradation of aromatic compounds
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:bceo00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
   00362 Benzoate degradation
    I35_7180
Enzymes [BR:bceo01000]
 4. Lyases
  4.1  Carbon-carbon lyases
   4.1.1  Carboxy-lyases
    4.1.1.44  4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase
     I35_7180
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: CMD
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: CDN64737
LinkDB
Position
3:202953..203768
AA seq 271 aa
MCNTAHGDDRTRRPLRFVAATGLALLAAACTHMQRTDTMQEPLSSPDLKAVAPAFERYTT
HTVFDGLWKRPHLSPRDRSIVTLSVLIARGQTVEMPLHVRLALDHGVKPAEISEMIAHLA
FYAGWANASAASIVVKHVYDERGIGPDQLAPADATPLPLNEAAEAQRARTVAENFGAVAP
GVVEYTTDALFRDLWLRPGLAPRDRSLVTVSALVANGQVAQIPYHLNRAMDNGLTQAEAS
EALTQLAFYAGWPNVFSAMPVFKDVFSRRAA
NT seq 816 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgtgcaatacggcgcacggtgacgatcgcacgcgtcgcccgttgcggttcgtcgccgcg
acgggcctggcgctgctcgccgccgcgtgcactcacatgcaaaggaccgacaccatgcag
gaacccttgtcttcccccgatttgaaagcggtcgccccggccttcgagcgatacacgacg
cacaccgtgttcgacggcttgtggaagcggccgcacctgtcgccgcgcgatcgcagcatc
gtgacgctgtcggtgctgatcgcccgcggccagaccgtcgagatgccgctgcatgtccgc
ctcgcgctggatcacggcgtgaagcccgcggaaatatcggaaatgatcgcgcacctggcc
ttttacgcgggatgggccaacgcgagcgccgcgtcgatcgtcgtcaagcacgtctatgac
gaacgcggcatcgggcccgatcagcttgcgccggcggacgccacgccgctgccgctgaac
gaggcggccgaggcgcagcgcgcacggacggtcgcggaaaacttcggcgccgtcgcgccg
ggcgtggtcgagtacacgaccgatgcgctgtttcgcgacctgtggcttcgcccggggctc
gcgccgcgcgaccgcagcctggtgacggtgagtgcgctcgtcgccaacggccaggtggcg
cagatcccgtatcacctgaaccgcgcgatggacaacgggctcacgcaggccgaggcatcc
gaggcgttgacgcaactggcgttctacgcgggatggccgaacgtcttttcggcgatgccc
gtgttcaaggatgtgttttcacggcgcgcggcgtga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system