Bacillus thuringiensis serovar chinensis CT-43: CT43_CH4391
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Entry
CT43_CH4391 CDS
T01838
Name
(GenBank) 5'-methylthioadenosine/S-adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase
KO
K01243
adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase [EC:
3.2.2.9
]
Organism
btc
Bacillus thuringiensis serovar chinensis CT-43
Pathway
btc00270
Cysteine and methionine metabolism
btc01100
Metabolic pathways
btc01230
Biosynthesis of amino acids
Module
btc_M00034
Methionine salvage pathway
btc_M00609
Cysteine biosynthesis, methionine => cysteine
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
btc00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09105 Amino acid metabolism
00270 Cysteine and methionine metabolism
CT43_CH4391
Enzymes [BR:
btc01000
]
3. Hydrolases
3.2 Glycosylases
3.2.2 Hydrolysing N-glycosyl compounds
3.2.2.9 adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase
CT43_CH4391
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Motif
Pfam:
PNP_UDP_1
LPD22
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AEA18052
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Position
complement(4357887..4358582)
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AA seq
231 aa
AA seq
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MRIAVIGAMEEEVRILRDKLEQAETETVAGCEFTKGLLAGHEVILLKSGIGKVNAAMSTT
ILLEKYKPEKVINTGSAGGFHHSLNVGDVVISTEVRHHDVDVTAFNYEYGQVPGMPPGFK
ADEALVALAEKCMQTEENIQVVKGMIATGDSFMSDPNRVAAIRDKFENLYAVEMEAAAVA
QVCHQYEVPFVIIRALSDIAGKESNVSFDQFLDQAALHSTNFIVKVLEELK
NT seq
696 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
ttgagaattgctgtaattggagcaatggaagaagaagtacgtattttacgtgacaaatta
gaacaagcagagacagaaacggttgcaggttgtgaatttacgaaaggactattagcagga
catgaagtaatcttgttaaagtctggtattggtaaagtaaacgcagcgatgtcaacgaca
attttattagaaaaatataagcctgaaaaagtaattaatactggttcagctggtggattc
catcattctctaaacgttggtgatgtagttatttccactgaagttcgtcaccatgacgta
gatgtaacagcatttaactatgaatatggtcaagtaccaggaatgccgcctggatttaaa
gctgatgaggcgttagttgcattagctgagaaatgtatgcaaactgaagaaaatattcaa
gttgtaaaaggcatgattgcaacaggcgattcatttatgagtgatccgaaccgcgttgca
gccatccgtgataaatttgaaaatctttatgcggtagaaatggaagcagcagctgtcgca
caagtatgccaccaatatgaagttccgtttgttatcattcgcgcactttctgatattgct
ggtaaagaatcaaatgtttcatttgatcagtttttagatcaagcagctcttcattctaca
aactttatcgtaaaagtgttagaagagttaaagtaa
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