Deefgea tanakiae: K4H28_09290
Help
Entry
K4H28_09290 CDS
T08586
Symbol
hisN
Name
(GenBank) histidinol-phosphatase
KO
K05602
histidinol-phosphatase [EC:
3.1.3.15
]
Organism
dtk
Deefgea tanakiae
Pathway
dtk00340
Histidine metabolism
dtk01100
Metabolic pathways
dtk01110
Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
dtk01230
Biosynthesis of amino acids
Module
dtk_M00026
Histidine biosynthesis, PRPP => histidine
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
dtk00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09105 Amino acid metabolism
00340 Histidine metabolism
K4H28_09290 (hisN)
Enzymes [BR:
dtk01000
]
3. Hydrolases
3.1 Acting on ester bonds
3.1.3 Phosphoric-monoester hydrolases
3.1.3.15 histidinol-phosphatase
K4H28_09290 (hisN)
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
Inositol_P
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
QZA76530
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(1976521..1977297)
Genome browser
AA seq
258 aa
AA seq
DB search
MIPSQTQIEFAQKLADASAAVIRQYYRTGLAIDDKLDASPVTQADREAEQVMRALINAER
PDEGIIGEEFGAEREDADWVWVLDPVDGTKAFITGRPLFVTLIGLLYRGQPVLGVVNQPI
ANERWVGVVGQGCTLNGETITVSQITELARARIGTTGPQYFSASGLQAFNELQKGGRFTV
YGGDGYQYALVATAGLDLVVEEGLKLHDFAAVTPVVIAAGGVMTDWQGQPLVKGSVGRVI
AAANPELHQLAVAAMKTA
NT seq
777 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
gtgattccaagccagacacaaattgaatttgcacaaaaattagccgatgcgagtgccgcg
gtgattcgccaatactatcgcactggtttagccatcgacgataaattggatgcaagcccg
gttacgcaagctgatcgtgaagccgagcaagtcatgcgcgctttgattaatgccgaacgc
cctgatgaaggcatcattggcgaagaatttggcgctgagcgcgaagacgcggattgggtg
tgggtgctcgatcccgtcgatggcaccaaagcatttattacggggcggcctttgtttgtg
accttaattggtcttttgtaccgtggtcagccggtattgggtgtggtcaatcagccgatt
gcgaatgagcgttgggtgggcgtggtggggcaaggttgtaccttgaatggagaaaccatc
acggtgagccaaatcaccgagctagctcgggcgcgaattggtacgactgggccgcagtat
ttttctgcatcaggattgcaagcctttaatgagttacaaaaaggcggacgcttcaccgtt
tacggcggtgatggctatcaatacgctctggttgcgaccgcgggcttggatttggtggtg
gaagaggggctcaaattacatgacttcgcagccgtaacaccagtcgtgattgccgcgggt
ggcgtaatgactgattggcaagggcagccattagtcaaaggttcagtggggcgcgtgatc
gcagctgccaacccagaattgcatcaattggccgtagcagcgatgaaaacggcttaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system