Searching in Pseudomonas simiae WCS417 (WCS417)
Found 14 curated entries in PaperBLAST's database that match '2.6.1.27' as complete word(s).
These curated entries have 11 distinct sequences.
Running ublast with E ≤ 0.01
Found 6 relevant proteins in Pseudomonas simiae WCS417, or try another query
PS417_18690: aromatic amino acid aminotransferase is similar to: | PaperBLAST |
TyrB / b4054: tyrosine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.57; EC 2.6.1.6; EC 2.6.1.42; EC 2.6.1.1; EC 2.6.1.5; EC 2.6.1.27) from Escherichia coli | 53% id, 100% cov |
AspC / b0928: aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1; EC 2.6.1.57; EC 2.6.1.27; EC 2.6.1.5; EC 2.6.1.7; EC 2.6.1.3) from Escherichia coli | 47% id, 100% cov |
PS417_19910: aromatic amino acid aminotransferase is similar to: | PaperBLAST |
AspC / b0928: aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1; EC 2.6.1.57; EC 2.6.1.27; EC 2.6.1.5; EC 2.6.1.7; EC 2.6.1.3) from Escherichia coli | 49% id, 99% cov |
TyrB / b4054: tyrosine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.57; EC 2.6.1.6; EC 2.6.1.42; EC 2.6.1.1; EC 2.6.1.5; EC 2.6.1.27) from Escherichia coli | 45% id, 99% cov |
PS417_17565: branched-chain amino acid aminotransferase is similar to: | PaperBLAST |
IlvE / b3770: branched-chain-amino-acid aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1; EC 2.6.1.57; EC 2.6.1.27; EC 2.6.1.42; EC 2.6.1.6) from Escherichia coli | 32% id, 99% cov |
PS417_21975: glutamate-pyruvate aminotransferase is similar to: | PaperBLAST |
S4UF58: tryptophan transaminase (EC 2.6.1.27) from Malassezia furfur | 25% id, 87% cov |
PS417_28165: GntR family transcriptional regulator is similar to: | PaperBLAST |
S4UF58: tryptophan transaminase (EC 2.6.1.27) from Malassezia furfur | 24% id, 80% cov |
PS417_14865: GntR family transcriptional regulator is similar to: | PaperBLAST |
S4UF58: tryptophan transaminase (EC 2.6.1.27) from Malassezia furfur | 23% id, 86% cov |
The hits are sorted by %identity * %coverage (highest first)
Running ublast against the 6-frame translation. All reading frames of at least 30 codons are included.
Found hits to 5 reading frames. These were all redundant with annotated proteins.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory