GenomeNet

Database: UniProt
Entry: Q5BZ77_SCHJA
LinkDB: Q5BZ77_SCHJA
Original site: Q5BZ77_SCHJA 
ID   Q5BZ77_SCHJA            Unreviewed;       149 AA.
AC   Q5BZ77;
DT   12-APR-2005, integrated into UniProtKB/TrEMBL.
DT   12-APR-2005, sequence version 1.
DT   14-DEC-2022, entry version 21.
DE   SubName: Full=Uncharacterized protein {ECO:0000313|EMBL:AAX27298.1};
OS   Schistosoma japonicum (Blood fluke).
OC   Eukaryota; Metazoa; Spiralia; Lophotrochozoa; Platyhelminthes; Trematoda;
OC   Digenea; Strigeidida; Schistosomatoidea; Schistosomatidae; Schistosoma.
OX   NCBI_TaxID=6182 {ECO:0000313|EMBL:AAX27298.1};
RN   [1] {ECO:0000313|EMBL:AAX27298.1}
RP   NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE.
RA   Han Z.;
RL   Submitted (MAR-2005) to the EMBL/GenBank/DDBJ databases.
RN   [2] {ECO:0000313|EMBL:AAX27298.1}
RP   NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE.
RX   PubMed=16617374; DOI=10.1371/journal.ppat.0020029;
RA   Liu F., Lu J., Hu W., Wang S.Y., Cui S.J., Chi M., Yan Q., Wang X.R.,
RA   Song H.D., Xu X.N., Wang J.J., Zhang X.L., Zhang X., Wang Z.Q., Xue C.L.,
RA   Brindley P.J., McManus D.P., Yang P.Y., Feng Z., Chen Z., Han Z.G.;
RT   "New perspectives on host-parasite interplay by comparative transcriptomic
RT   and proteomic analyses of Schistosoma japonicum.";
RL   PLoS Pathog. 2:268-281(2006).
CC   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CC   Copyrighted by the UniProt Consortium, see https://www.uniprot.org/terms
CC   Distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) License
CC   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DR   EMBL; AY811409; AAX27298.1; -; mRNA.
DR   AlphaFoldDB; Q5BZ77; -.
DR   InterPro; IPR021442; DUF3091.
DR   Pfam; PF11291; DUF3091; 1.
PE   2: Evidence at transcript level;
SQ   SEQUENCE   149 AA;  17660 MW;  4191FED5E8C4854E CRC64;
     MSSAYRHNTQ VYDEIQGKYP GNWREINDFK ICYTRLQTNL NPIKHYEVMK SFEEEIRKDF
     AEFPEEVFEK IMKFSGELKQ LYGKSQSNAK NISCVKPENI NPEDVTNLEN SIKNYQSALV
     DFNIFNLKKQ YYSNLKKKLE NLAKNHGEE
//
DBGET integrated database retrieval system