Burkholderia multivorans ATCC 17616 (JGI): Bmul_2949
Help
Entry
Bmul_2949 CDS
T00624
Name
(GenBank) (2Fe-2S)-binding domain protein
KO
K13483
xanthine dehydrogenase YagT iron-sulfur-binding subunit
Organism
bmu
Burkholderia multivorans ATCC 17616 (JGI)
Pathway
bmu00230
Purine metabolism
bmu01100
Metabolic pathways
bmu01120
Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
bmu01232
Nucleotide metabolism
Module
bmu_M00546
Purine degradation, xanthine => urea
bmu_M00958
Adenine ribonucleotide degradation, AMP => Urate
bmu_M00959
Guanine ribonucleotide degradation, GMP => Urate
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
bmu00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09104 Nucleotide metabolism
00230 Purine metabolism
Bmul_2949
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Fer2_2
Fer2
Fer2_3
Fer2_4
UCR_Fe-S_N
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
ABX16633
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
1:complement(3229383..3230132)
Genome browser
AA seq
249 aa
AA seq
DB search
MSTDRPLSPSSAQGGACSSAAPCQHGATPPVHDTPSSAARRRFLQSAAAAATVGAAPAMH
AQPAHASAASAPPSRAAVPARPVHLDINGHAYTLQLEPRVTLLDALREYAGLTGTKKGCD
RGQCGACTVLVDGRRINACLTLAVMHEGQRITTVEGLARDGVLSPVQRAFVEHDAFQCGY
CTPGQLCSATALLDEFASGAASAATADVRQRLAQLSDDEIRERMSGNLCRCGAYSNIVAA
VRAAHARNA
NT seq
750 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgtccaccgatcgacctctttccccgtcatccgcgcagggcggtgcgtgttcgtccgcc
gcgccttgccagcacggcgcgacgccgcccgtccacgatacgccgtcgagcgccgcgcgg
cggcgcttcctgcaatcggcggcggccgccgccacggtcggcgcggcgccggccatgcat
gcgcagccggcgcatgcgagcgcggcgtcggccccgccgtcgcgcgcggcggtgccggcg
cgccccgtccatctcgacatcaacgggcatgcctatacgctgcagctcgaaccgcgcgtc
acgctgctcgacgcgctgcgcgagtacgccggcctcaccggcacgaagaagggctgcgac
cgcggccagtgcggcgcgtgcacggtgctcgtcgacggacggcgcatcaacgcgtgtctg
acgctcgcggtgatgcacgaagggcagcgcatcacgaccgtcgaagggctcgcgcgcgac
ggcgtgctgagcccggtgcagcgcgcgttcgtcgaacacgatgcgttccagtgcggctat
tgcacgccgggccagctgtgttcggcgacggcgttgctcgacgagttcgcgtcgggcgcg
gcgagcgccgccactgccgacgtgcggcagcgtctggcgcagctgtcggacgacgagatc
cgcgaacgcatgagcggcaacctgtgccgctgcggcgcctattcgaacatcgtcgccgcc
gtgcgtgccgcgcacgcgcgcaacgcgtaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system