GenomeNet

Database: UniProt
Entry: A0A1I1GG10_9LACT
LinkDB: A0A1I1GG10_9LACT
Original site: A0A1I1GG10_9LACT 
ID   A0A1I1GG10_9LACT        Unreviewed;       289 AA.
AC   A0A1I1GG10;
DT   22-NOV-2017, integrated into UniProtKB/TrEMBL.
DT   22-NOV-2017, sequence version 1.
DT   24-JAN-2024, entry version 19.
DE   SubName: Full=ComK protein {ECO:0000313|EMBL:SFC10491.1};
GN   ORFNames=SAMN04488102_10359 {ECO:0000313|EMBL:SFC10491.1};
OS   Alkalibacterium subtropicum.
OC   Bacteria; Bacillota; Bacilli; Lactobacillales; Carnobacteriaceae;
OC   Alkalibacterium.
OX   NCBI_TaxID=753702 {ECO:0000313|EMBL:SFC10491.1, ECO:0000313|Proteomes:UP000199612};
RN   [1] {ECO:0000313|EMBL:SFC10491.1, ECO:0000313|Proteomes:UP000199612}
RP   NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE [LARGE SCALE GENOMIC DNA].
RC   STRAIN=DSM 23664 {ECO:0000313|EMBL:SFC10491.1,
RC   ECO:0000313|Proteomes:UP000199612};
RA   de Groot N.N.;
RL   Submitted (OCT-2016) to the EMBL/GenBank/DDBJ databases.
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; FOLT01000003; SFC10491.1; -; Genomic_DNA.
DR   AlphaFoldDB; A0A1I1GG10; -.
DR   OrthoDB; 2155584at2; -.
DR   Proteomes; UP000199612; Unassembled WGS sequence.
DR   GO; GO:0030420; P:establishment of competence for transformation; IEA:InterPro.
DR   InterPro; IPR010461; ComK.
DR   Pfam; PF06338; ComK; 1.
PE   4: Predicted;
SQ   SEQUENCE   289 AA;  33124 MW;  BB235CA17760F7CC CRC64;
     MDYDKKYNDS MMDRFDAVIR CSEAKKTRPY TLVPVQASTD SRVLSITEDS VLDFLDVALE
     QTYLLLDDDS FYICDLSKET SRHYNTLVFQ INGSVLKSKE TTTHVITRYM KYIGVDYQAT
     MQLGKSLGIL SQCPFVCCSL CFTPLNGASR KPVSWIGLHH VQAITPHLKA TYFNIDAKHE
     LILNIPHKKA SRLIRQTKIL SDSLKKMATE WLTLMHHQEA FSSRPNVVTR CTVSSHFSQP
     LPLLSTWLMT QSFLQGRWMV KDMLKEGDPL LDYLPPEELS NDNEINDED
//
DBGET integrated database retrieval system