KEGG   Rhizobium johnstonii: RL4091
Entry
RL4091            CDS       T00402                                 
Name
(GenBank) putative inositol mono-phosphatase family protein
  KO
K05602  histidinol-phosphatase [EC:3.1.3.15]
Organism
rle  Rhizobium johnstonii
Pathway
rle00340  Histidine metabolism
rle01100  Metabolic pathways
rle01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
rle01230  Biosynthesis of amino acids
Module
rle_M00026  Histidine biosynthesis, PRPP => histidine
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:rle00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09105 Amino acid metabolism
   00340 Histidine metabolism
    RL4091
Enzymes [BR:rle01000]
 3. Hydrolases
  3.1  Acting on ester bonds
   3.1.3  Phosphoric-monoester hydrolases
    3.1.3.15  histidinol-phosphatase
     RL4091
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: Inositol_P
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: CAK09580
RhizoBase: RL4091
UniProt: Q1MBV3
LinkDB
Position
complement(4326728..4327501)
AA seq 257 aa
MFPDRSFFNRLAEAARAETLPRFRSGLDITNKLSSGFDPVTEGDRAAELAIRALIEESFP
GHGILGEEHGNVGLDREYVWVIDPIDGTRAFISGVPVWGTLIGLQKEGMAIMGMIEQPFT
GERYFADQNGSIYTGPEGERRLATRQCDALSNAILFTTSPHLFAGEEMEKYREIESQVRL
FRYGCDCYAYALLAAGHVDLVVENSLKPYDVGGIIPVIEGAGGIITTWDGGRPENGGSII
AAGSRAVYEQAIAILQR
NT seq 774 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgtttcctgaccgttcgttcttcaaccgcctggcggaagccgcccgagccgaaacgctg
ccgcgcttccgctccggcctcgatatcacgaacaagctttcctccggtttcgacccggtg
acggagggcgaccgggcggccgaactcgccatccgggcgctgatcgaggagagtttcccc
ggccacggcattctcggcgaggagcacggtaatgtcgggctcgaccgcgaatatgtctgg
gtgatcgatccgatcgacggcacgcgcgccttcatctcaggtgtgccggtgtggggaacg
ctgatcggcctgcagaaggaaggcatggcgatcatgggcatgatcgagcaaccctttacc
ggcgagcgttatttcgccgaccagaacggctcgatctacaccgggccggagggcgagcgg
cgtctggcgacgcgccagtgcgatgcgctttcgaacgccatcctgttcaccacctcgccg
catctctttgccggcgaggagatggagaaataccgcgagatcgagagccaggtacggctc
ttccgctacggctgcgactgctatgcctatgcgctgcttgccgccggtcatgtcgacctc
gtcgtcgaaaacagcctgaagccctatgatgtcggcggcatcattcccgtcatcgagggg
gcgggcggcatcatcaccacctgggacggcggacggccggaaaacggcggctcgatcatc
gccgccggcagccgggcagtctacgaacaggcaatcgccatcctgcagcgctga

DBGET integrated database retrieval system