Nicotiana tabacum (common tobacco): 107789113
Help
Entry
107789113 CDS
T04643
Name
(RefSeq) adenylyl-sulfate kinase 3-like
KO
K00860
adenylylsulfate kinase [EC:
2.7.1.25
]
Organism
nta
Nicotiana tabacum (common tobacco)
Pathway
nta00230
Purine metabolism
nta00920
Sulfur metabolism
nta01100
Metabolic pathways
Module
nta_M00176
Assimilatory sulfate reduction, sulfate => H2S
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
nta00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09102 Energy metabolism
00920 Sulfur metabolism
107789113
09104 Nucleotide metabolism
00230 Purine metabolism
107789113
Enzymes [BR:
nta01000
]
2. Transferases
2.7 Transferring phosphorus-containing groups
2.7.1 Phosphotransferases with an alcohol group as acceptor
2.7.1.25 adenylyl-sulfate kinase
107789113
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
APS_kinase
AAA_33
AAA_18
nSTAND3
CbiA
KTI12
AAA_29
ABC_tran
SRP54
MeaB
AAA_17
Zeta_toxin
AAA_16
SLFN-g3_helicase
RNA_helicase
AAA_22
ParA
NACHT
NB-ARC
T2SSE
AAA_25
AAA_30
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
107789113
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_016466368
UniProt:
A0A1S3ZQ36
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
Un
AA seq
207 aa
AA seq
DB search
MSTVANPANIFWHDNLVGKTEREKLLNQQGCVVWITGLSGSGKSTIACSLGREFQARGKL
SYILDGDNLRHGLNKNLGFSAESRAENIRRTGEVAKLFADAGLICIASLISPYRKDRDAC
RVLLPDKKFIEVFLNMPLQLCEERDPKGLYKLARAGKIKGFTGIDDPYEPPLNCEIEIQQ
KDGLVPAPNEMAGQVVSYMEDRGFLEA
NT seq
624 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgtctacagtggccaatcctgcaaacatattctggcatgataatctagtcggtaagaca
gaaagggaaaagctgcttaaccaacagggatgtgttgtgtggattacaggtctcagtgga
tcaggaaaaagcacaattgcatgttccctaggtagagaatttcaggcaaggggaaagctt
tcgtacattcttgatggtgacaaccttaggcatggtctgaacaagaatcttgggttctca
gcagaaagccgtgctgagaatatacgtaggactggggaagttgcaaagctctttgcggat
gctggattaatttgcattgcaagcctgatatctccttacagaaaagatcgagatgcttgt
cgtgtgctattgccagataaaaagtttattgaggtttttctgaatatgcctctacaattg
tgtgaagaaagagatccaaaaggcctctacaagctagctcgtgcaggaaagatcaaaggt
tttactggaatagatgatccttatgaaccacctttgaattgtgagattgaaatacaacaa
aaagatggactagttcctgcaccaaatgaaatggctgggcaagtagtctcttatatggag
gacagaggctttttggaagcttag
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system