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CAZyme Information: EJT52261.1

You are here: Home > Sequence: EJT52261.1

Basic Information | Genomic context | Full Sequence | Enzyme annotations |  CAZy signature domains |  CDD domains | CAZyme hits | PDB hits | Swiss-Prot hits | SignalP and Lipop annotations | TMHMM annotations

Basic Information help

Species Trichosporon asahii
Lineage Basidiomycota; Tremellomycetes; ; Trichosporonaceae; Trichosporon; Trichosporon asahii
CAZyme ID EJT52261.1
CAZy Family GT48
CAZyme Description unspecified product
CAZyme Property
Protein Length CGC Molecular Weight Isoelectric Point
2909 326077.62 7.5687
Genome Property
Genome Version/Assembly ID Genes Strain NCBI Taxon ID Non Protein Coding Genes Protein Coding Genes
FungiDB-61_TasahiiCBS2479 8834 1186058 523 8311
Gene Location

Full Sequence      Download help

Enzyme Prediction      help

No EC number prediction in EJT52261.1.

CAZyme Signature Domains help

Family Start End Evalue family coverage
GT4 2657 2808 8.6e-16 0.89375

CDD Domains      download full data without filtering help

Cdd ID Domain E-Value qStart qEnd sStart sEnd Domain Description
340841 GT4-like 1.12e-33 2331 2807 8 439
glycosyltransferase family 4 proteins. This family is most closely related to the GT4 family of glycosyltransferases. Glycosyltransferases catalyze the transfer of sugar moieties from activated donor molecules to specific acceptor molecules, forming glycosidic bonds. The acceptor molecule can be a lipid, a protein, a heterocyclic compound, or another carbohydrate residue. This group of glycosyltransferases is most closely related to the previously defined glycosyltransferase family 1 (GT1). The members of this family may transfer UDP, ADP, GDP, or CMP linked sugars. The diverse enzymatic activities among members of this family reflect a wide range of biological functions. The protein structure available for this family has the GTB topology, one of the two protein topologies observed for nucleotide-sugar-dependent glycosyltransferases. GTB proteins have distinct N- and C- terminal domains each containing a typical Rossmann fold. The two domains have high structural homology despite minimal sequence homology. The large cleft that separates the two domains includes the catalytic center and permits a high degree of flexibility. The members of this family are found mainly in bacteria, while some of them are also found in Archaea and eukaryotes.
340839 GT4_GT28_WabH-like 2.58e-20 2634 2807 159 326
family 4 and family 28 glycosyltransferases similar to Klebsiella WabH. This family is most closely related to the GT1 family of glycosyltransferases. WabH in Klebsiella pneumoniae has been shown to transfer a GlcNAc residue from UDP-GlcNAc onto the acceptor GalUA residue in the cellular outer core.
223515 RfaB 6.73e-20 2625 2820 163 353
Glycosyltransferase involved in cell wall bisynthesis [Cell wall/membrane/envelope biogenesis].
404563 Glyco_trans_1_4 3.98e-18 2660 2808 2 137
Glycosyl transferases group 1.
340831 GT4_PimA-like 5.73e-16 2634 2808 164 332
phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosyltransferase. This family is most closely related to the GT4 family of glycosyltransferases and named after PimA in Propionibacterium freudenreichii, which is involved in the biosynthesis of phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosides (PIM) which are early precursors in the biosynthesis of lipomannans (LM) and lipoarabinomannans (LAM), and catalyzes the addition of a mannosyl residue from GDP-D-mannose (GDP-Man) to the position 2 of the carrier lipid phosphatidyl-myo-inositol (PI) to generate a phosphatidyl-myo-inositol bearing an alpha-1,2-linked mannose residue (PIM1). Glycosyltransferases catalyze the transfer of sugar moieties from activated donor molecules to specific acceptor molecules, forming glycosidic bonds. The acceptor molecule can be a lipid, a protein, a heterocyclic compound, or another carbohydrate residue. This group of glycosyltransferases is most closely related to the previously defined glycosyltransferase family 1 (GT1). The members of this family may transfer UDP, ADP, GDP, or CMP linked sugars. The diverse enzymatic activities among members of this family reflect a wide range of biological functions. The protein structure available for this family has the GTB topology, one of the two protein topologies observed for nucleotide-sugar-dependent glycosyltransferases. GTB proteins have distinct N- and C- terminal domains each containing a typical Rossmann fold. The two domains have high structural homology despite minimal sequence homology. The large cleft that separates the two domains includes the catalytic center and permits a high degree of flexibility. The members of this family are found mainly in certain bacteria and archaea.

CAZyme Hits      help

Hit ID E-Value Query Start Query End Hit Start Hit End
0.0 1 2909 1 2827
0.0 319 2909 161 2806
0.0 355 2907 29 2621
0.0 319 2887 163 2777
0.0 394 2892 273 2847

PDB Hits      help

EJT52261.1 has no PDB hit.

Swiss-Prot Hits      help

EJT52261.1 has no Swissprot hit.

SignalP and Lipop Annotations help

This protein is predicted as OTHER

Other SP_Sec_SPI CS Position
0.999933 0.000085

TMHMM  Annotations      download full data without filtering help

Start End
44 66
1030 1052
1065 1087
1107 1129
1136 1158
1196 1215
1342 1364
1379 1401
1439 1461
1466 1485
1497 1519