GenomeNet

Database: UniProt
Entry: U1QSY6_9EURY
LinkDB: U1QSY6_9EURY
Original site: U1QSY6_9EURY 
ID   U1QSY6_9EURY            Unreviewed;       145 AA.
AC   U1QSY6;
DT   13-NOV-2013, integrated into UniProtKB/TrEMBL.
DT   13-NOV-2013, sequence version 1.
DT   24-JAN-2024, entry version 24.
DE   SubName: Full=Acyl dehydratase {ECO:0000313|EMBL:ERH10343.1};
GN   ORFNames=J07HX64_02116 {ECO:0000313|EMBL:ERH10343.1};
OS   halophilic archaeon J07HX64.
OC   Archaea; Euryarchaeota; Stenosarchaea group; Halobacteria; Halobacteriales.
OX   NCBI_TaxID=1085028 {ECO:0000313|EMBL:ERH10343.1};
RN   [1] {ECO:0000313|EMBL:ERH10343.1}
RP   NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE [LARGE SCALE GENOMIC DNA].
RX   PubMed=23637883;
RA   Podell S., Ugalde J.A., Narasingarao P., Banfield J.F., Heidelberg K.B.,
RA   Allen E.E.;
RT   "Assembly-driven community genomics of a hypersaline microbial ecosystem.";
RL   PLoS ONE 8:E61692-E61692(2013).
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; KE356579; ERH10343.1; -; Genomic_DNA.
DR   AlphaFoldDB; U1QSY6; -.
DR   STRING; 1085028.J07HX64_02116; -.
DR   HOGENOM; CLU_094876_1_0_2; -.
DR   Gene3D; 3.10.129.10; Hotdog Thioesterase; 1.
DR   InterPro; IPR029069; HotDog_dom_sf.
DR   InterPro; IPR002539; MaoC-like_dom.
DR   Pfam; PF01575; MaoC_dehydratas; 1.
DR   SUPFAM; SSF54637; Thioesterase/thiol ester dehydrase-isomerase; 1.
PE   4: Predicted;
FT   DOMAIN          20..114
FT                   /note="MaoC-like"
FT                   /evidence="ECO:0000259|Pfam:PF01575"
SQ   SEQUENCE   145 AA;  16154 MW;  15A2DFC864533BB6 CRC64;
     MFVHDSYGAV TTGERVQLWS YELTGEGIRS FAERYDPQGF HLSDNPDGPF GGLVASGWQT
     AAVTMRLLVE GYLQEAHTVG SLGLDGLRWP EPVRPGDRLS ATLTLGEKEP FDEGRGLVHQ
     EIETHNQDDE QVLWVDALTL YPREP
//
DBGET integrated database retrieval system