Burkholderia sp. KJ006: MYA_1276
Help
Entry
MYA_1276 CDS
T02110
Name
(GenBank) 5'-methylthioadenosine nucleosidase / S-adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase
KO
K01243
adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase [EC:
3.2.2.9
]
Organism
buk
Burkholderia sp. KJ006
Pathway
buk00270
Cysteine and methionine metabolism
buk01100
Metabolic pathways
buk01230
Biosynthesis of amino acids
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
buk00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09105 Amino acid metabolism
00270 Cysteine and methionine metabolism
MYA_1276
Enzymes [BR:
buk01000
]
3. Hydrolases
3.2 Glycosylases
3.2.2 Hydrolysing N-glycosyl compounds
3.2.2.9 adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase
MYA_1276
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
PNP_UDP_1
Sp-DndD
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AFJ85640
UniProt:
I2DLW4
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
1:1368805..1369602
Genome browser
AA seq
265 aa
AA seq
DB search
MMGIDMVDTLAARPLGILAALPEELGDLIAAMRADGEMKTVTLGRRDYHVGTVHGAACVV
TLARVGKVAAAATVSALIHVFGVSGVVFTGVAGGVSRTVRVGDVVVADTLLQHDLDASPL
FPRYEVPLLGITHFATDVELTARLKAACALFVAEEGARFGERFGLAGATLHGGLIISGDR
FVSSEPEVVALRDALPDALAVEMEGAAIAQVCAEHDVPFALVRTISDTADDHATQSFSHF
LSAIASSYSSGILKRFLTLHATTAV
NT seq
798 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgatggggatcgacatggtggatacactcgcggcgcgcccgctcggcatcctggccgcg
ctgcccgaggaactcggcgatctgatcgccgcgatgcgcgccgacggcgaaatgaagacg
gtcacgctcggccgccgcgattatcacgtcggcaccgtgcatggcgcagcctgcgtcgtc
acgctcgcgcgggtcggcaaggtcgcggccgcggcgacggtcagcgcgctgatccacgtg
ttcggcgtgtccggcgtggtgttcaccggcgtcgcgggcggcgtgtcgcgcacggtgcgc
gtgggcgacgtggtcgtcgccgatacgcttctgcagcacgacctcgacgcgtcgccgctg
tttccgcgctacgaggtgccgctgctcggcatcacgcactttgccaccgacgtggagctg
acggcccggctgaaggccgcgtgcgcgctgttcgtcgccgaggagggcgcgcgcttcggc
gaacggttcggactcgccggcgcgacgctgcacggcgggctcatcatcagcggcgaccgc
ttcgtatcgagcgagccggaagtcgtcgcgctgcgcgacgcgctgccggacgcgctcgcg
gtcgaaatggaaggcgcggcgatcgcgcaggtgtgcgcggaacacgacgtgccgttcgcc
ctcgtgcgcacgatctccgacacggccgacgatcacgcgacgcagtcgttctcgcacttc
ctgtcggcgatcgcgagcagctattcgtccggcatcctcaagcgcttcctgacgctgcac
gcgacgacggcggtctga
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system