KEGG   Lacticaseibacillus paracasei ATCC 334: LSEI_0811
Entry
LSEI_0811         CDS       T00407                                 
Name
(GenBank) Predicted hydrolase (HAD superfamily)
  KO
K01560  2-haloacid dehalogenase [EC:3.8.1.2]
Organism
lca  Lacticaseibacillus paracasei ATCC 334
Pathway
lca00361  Chlorocyclohexane and chlorobenzene degradation
lca00625  Chloroalkane and chloroalkene degradation
lca01100  Metabolic pathways
lca01120  Microbial metabolism in diverse environments
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:lca00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09111 Xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism
   00625 Chloroalkane and chloroalkene degradation
    LSEI_0811
   00361 Chlorocyclohexane and chlorobenzene degradation
    LSEI_0811
Enzymes [BR:lca01000]
 3. Hydrolases
  3.8  Acting on halide bonds
   3.8.1  In carbon-halide compounds
    3.8.1.2  (S)-2-haloacid dehalogenase
     LSEI_0811
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: HAD_2 Hydrolase HAD Hydrolase_like
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: ABJ69647
UniProt: Q03AX5
LinkDB
Position
808511..809194
AA seq 227 aa
MYRIILFDVDDTLLDFKAGELKSLAKMFARLNLTYSPRIEASYLKINASLWRDYEAGRIT
RPELFDVRFAKLFRHHHIEADPHLAERTYHHFLDQEAILLPRVLDTLDALQDYRLFIVSN
GIEPVQRERLASSGLIDYFEDIFVSDSVGSPKPTVAFFDYVAKRIPRFDRRETLIMGDSL
TSDIQGGINGKIDSIWFNPHFQPNRDHITPTYQLNEFSDLTKLLTLN
NT seq 684 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgtatcggataattttgtttgatgttgatgacacgttactggattttaaagcaggtgaa
ctaaaaagtctggcaaagatgtttgccagactcaatttgacttactcgccgcggattgag
gcaagttatctgaaaattaatgccagtctatggcgtgactacgaagcggggcgcatcacg
cggccagaattatttgatgtgcggtttgccaaactctttcgccatcatcacattgaggct
gatccgcatttggcagaacgcacctatcatcattttttggatcaagaggccattttgctg
ccgcgagttctggacaccttggatgcgttgcaggattatcggctgtttattgtcagcaac
ggtatcgagcctgtgcaacgtgaacgcttggcatcgagcggtctgattgattactttgaa
gatatttttgtttctgatagcgtgggcagcccgaagccgaccgtggccttttttgactat
gttgccaaacgcatcccgcggtttgaccggcgtgagacattgatcatgggtgactcgctg
acctcagacattcaaggtgggatcaatggcaaaattgattcgatttggtttaatccacat
tttcagccaaatcgcgatcacatcacaccgacttatcaactcaacgaatttagcgatttg
acgaagctattgacgcttaactga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system