KEGG   Enterobacter kobei ENHKU01: ECENHK_16175
Entry
ECENHK_16175      CDS       T02315                                 
Name
(GenBank) phosphoribosylaminoimidazole-succinocarboxamide synthase
  KO
K01923  phosphoribosylaminoimidazole-succinocarboxamide synthase [EC:6.3.2.6]
Organism
eno  Enterobacter kobei ENHKU01
Pathway
eno00230  Purine metabolism
eno01100  Metabolic pathways
eno01110  Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites
Module
eno_M00048  De novo purine biosynthesis, PRPP + glutamine => IMP
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:eno00001]
 09100 Metabolism
  09104 Nucleotide metabolism
   00230 Purine metabolism
    ECENHK_16175
Enzymes [BR:eno01000]
 6. Ligases
  6.3  Forming carbon-nitrogen bonds
   6.3.2  Acid-D-amino-acid ligases (peptide synthases)
    6.3.2.6  phosphoribosylaminoimidazolesuccinocarboxamide synthase
     ECENHK_16175
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: SAICAR_synt Peptidase_M42
Other DBs
NCBI-ProteinID: AFP71074
UniProt: A0A0F0YGS2
Position
complement(3460137..3460850)
AA seq 237 aa
MQKQAELYRGKAKTVYSTENPDLLVLEFRNDTSAGDGARIEQFDRKGMVNNKFNHFIMTK
LAEAGIPTQMEALLSDTECLVKKLDMVPVECVIRNRAAGSLVKRLGIEEGIELNPPLFDL
FLKNDAMHDPMVNDSYCETFGWVNKENLARMKELTYKANDVLKKLFDDAGLILVDFKLEF
GLFKGEVVLGDEFSPDGSRLWDKETLDKMDKDRFRQSLGGLIEAYEAVAHRLGVKLD
NT seq 714 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atgcagaagcaagctgagttgtatcgtggcaaagcgaagaccgtatacagcacggaaaac
ccggatctgttggtgctcgagttccgcaatgatacgtcagcaggggatggcgcgcgcatt
gagcagttcgatcgtaaaggcatggtgaacaacaagttcaaccacttcattatgaccaaa
ctggccgaagcgggtatcccgactcagatggaagcgttgctgtccgatacggaatgtctg
gtgaaaaaactggatatggttccggttgagtgcgttattcgtaaccgtgcagcgggctcc
ctggtgaagcgtctgggtattgaagaaggtatcgaactgaatccaccgctgttcgacctg
ttcctgaaaaacgatgccatgcacgatccgatggtcaatgattcctactgcgaaaccttc
ggctgggtcaataaagagaacctggcgcgcatgaaagagctgacctacaaagccaacgac
gtgctgaaaaagctgtttgacgatgcgggcctgatcctcgtcgacttcaagctggagttc
ggtctgttcaaaggcgaagtggtgctgggtgatgagttctccccggacggtagccgcctg
tgggacaaagaaaccctggataaaatggacaaagaccgtttccgtcagagcctgggtggc
ctgattgaagcctatgaagcggttgctcaccgtttaggcgttaagctcgactaa

DBGET integrated database retrieval system