Sodalis praecaptivus: Sant_2466
Help
Entry
Sant_2466 CDS
T03004
Name
(GenBank) Putative thiamine kinase
KO
K07251
thiamine kinase [EC:
2.7.1.89
]
Organism
sod
Sodalis praecaptivus
Pathway
sod00730
Thiamine metabolism
sod01100
Metabolic pathways
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
sod00001
]
09100 Metabolism
09108 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins
00730 Thiamine metabolism
Sant_2466
Enzymes [BR:
sod01000
]
2. Transferases
2.7 Transferring phosphorus-containing groups
2.7.1 Phosphotransferases with an alcohol group as acceptor
2.7.1.89 thiamine kinase
Sant_2466
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
Gene cluster
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
APH
Choline_kinase
Fructosamin_kin
ABC1
DsbC_N
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID:
AHF77506
UniProt:
W0HUJ0
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
complement(2868179..2869009)
Genome browser
AA seq
276 aa
AA seq
DB search
MLAQLLPRATLDSVNPLPVSGLTGESWRLQGAGVDLLAREASGQKIQLGVDRRREFRLLR
ALNGSGLAPRPRGITAGWLLVEWLPGAPLNTQGWQQALTTGTLAGLLARLHQQRRSGYPL
NLQARFARYWQTSDPARRTPAWLRLHRRFLRRRPPTALRQALLHMDVHQGNVLLQQAGAL
TLIDWEYAGDGDVALELAALFGGNALLATDRERLLAEYVRLMPGLASDRLRRQINAWLPW
VNYLMLLWYETRWHQTGNRDFLALATPLRHYFNLSR
NT seq
831 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
atgttggcgcagttactgccgcgtgcaacgttagacagtgtcaaccccctgccggtcagc
ggtttaaccggcgaaagctggcgattgcagggcgccggtgttgatttgctggcgcgcgaa
gccagcgggcagaaaatccagctgggcgttgaccggcgtcgggaatttcgcctgttgcgc
gcccttaacggcagcggcctggcgccgcgtccgcggggcatcaccgccggctggctgctg
gtggagtggctacccggcgcaccgttaaatacgcagggctggcaacaggcgctgacgacg
ggcacgctggcgggcctcctggccaggctgcaccagcagcggcgtagcggctacccgctg
aacctacaggcgcgctttgcgcgctattggcaaaccagcgacccggcgcggcgcacaccg
gcctggctgaggctacacaggcggtttttgcgccggcgtccgccgacggcgctgcgccag
gcgctgttacatatggatgtgcatcaaggcaatgtactgcttcagcaggcgggtgcgctg
acgcttatcgactgggaatatgccggcgatggggatgttgcgctggagctggcggcgctg
tttggcggcaatgctctgctggccacggatcgcgagcgtttgctggcggagtatgtgcgt
ctcatgccgggcctggcgagcgatcgtttacgccggcaaattaacgcctggcttccctgg
gtcaactatctcatgctgctgtggtatgagacgcgttggcaccaaaccggcaaccgcgac
tttcttgctctggcgacaccgctgcgccactattttaatctgtcgcgttaa
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system