KEGG   Bacillus licheniformis DSM 13 = ATCC 14580: BLi02855
Entry
BLi02855          CDS       T00200                                 
Symbol
mtnN
Name
(GenBank) 5'-methylthioadenosine/S-adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase MtnN
  KO
K01243  adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase [EC:3.2.2.9]
Organism
bld  Bacillus licheniformis DSM 13 = ATCC 14580
Pathway
bld00270  Cysteine and methionine metabolism
bld01100  Metabolic pathways
bld01230  Biosynthesis of amino acids
Module
bld_M00034  Methionine salvage pathway
bld_M00609  Cysteine biosynthesis, methionine => cysteine
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:bld00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09105 Amino acid metabolism
   00270 Cysteine and methionine metabolism
    BLi02855 (mtnN)
Enzymes [BR:bld01000]
 3. Hydrolases
  3.2  Glycosylases
   3.2.2  Hydrolysing N-glycosyl compounds
    3.2.2.9  adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase
     BLi02855 (mtnN)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: PNP_UDP_1
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: AAU41725
UniProt: Q65GT9
LinkDB
Position
complement(2744956..2745651)
AA seq 231 aa
MKIAVIGAMEEEVTILRSKLEQTNREVIANCEFTSGFYEGKEVVLLKSGIGKVNAAMSTT
ILLDRFKPDVVINTGSAGGFHHSLNVGDIVISTEVRHHDVDVTAFDYEYGQVPNLPAAYK
ADNALIQAAEDEASELGHIQVVKGTIATGDSFMSDPDRVAFIRGKFEDLYAVEMEAAAVA
QVSYQFNTPFVVIRALSDIAGKESEISFDQFLEQAAKHSTDLVLRMIKRIN
NT seq 696 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgaaaatcgcagttatcggagcaatggaagaagaagtcacgattttgcgaagcaaactc
gaacagacgaaccgggaagtcatcgcaaactgtgaatttaccagcgggttttatgaagga
aaagaggtcgtgcttttaaagtccggcatcggcaaagtcaatgcagccatgagcacgacg
attctgcttgaccgctttaaaccggacgttgtcatcaacaccggatcagccggcggcttt
catcattcgcttaatgtcggagatatcgtcatctcgaccgaagtccgccatcacgatgtc
gatgtcacggcatttgattatgaatatggacaggttccgaatctgccggctgcatacaaa
gccgacaatgcattgatccaagcggcggaagacgaagcgtctgaactggggcacattcag
gttgtcaaaggaacgatagcaacaggcgattcctttatgagcgatcctgaccgcgtcgca
ttcatccgcggcaagtttgaagacctttacgcggttgaaatggaagctgcggctgtcgcg
caggtttcttatcaatttaatacgccgtttgttgtcatcagggcgctctcagacatcgcc
ggaaaagaatctgaaatttcatttgaccaatttttggaacaggctgccaagcattcgaca
gatcttgtgcttcgcatgattaaaagaatcaattaa

DBGET integrated database retrieval system