Protein Info for ABCV34_RS15240 in Castellaniella sp019104865 MT123

Annotation: molybdenum cofactor guanylyltransferase MobA

These analyses and tools can help you predict a protein's function, but be skeptical. For enzymes, over 10% of annotations from KEGG or SEED are probably incorrect. For other types of proteins, the error rates may be much higher. MetaCyc and Swiss-Prot have low error rates, but the best hits in these databases are often quite distant, so this protein's function may not be the same. TIGRFam has low error rates. Finally, many experimentally-characterized proteins are not in any of these databases. To find relevant papers, use PaperBLAST.

Protein Families and Features

1 50 100 150 213 TIGR02665: molybdenum cofactor guanylyltransferase" amino acids 24 to 207 (184 residues), 156.6 bits, see alignment E=3.7e-50 PF12804: NTP_transf_3" amino acids 25 to 184 (160 residues), 112.9 bits, see alignment E=8.7e-37

Best Hits

Swiss-Prot: 35% identical to MOBA_MANSM: Molybdenum cofactor guanylyltransferase (mobA) from Mannheimia succiniciproducens (strain MBEL55E)

KEGG orthology group: K03752, molybdopterin-guanine dinucleotide biosynthesis protein A (inferred from 49% identity to put:PT7_2096)

Predicted SEED Role

No annotation

Sequence Analysis Tools

PaperBLAST (search for papers about homologs of this protein)

Search CDD (the Conserved Domains Database, which includes COG and superfam)

Search structures

Predict protein localization: PSORTb (Gram-negative bacteria)

Predict transmembrane helices and signal peptides: Phobius

Check the current SEED with FIGfam search

Find homologs in fast.genomics or the ENIGMA genome browser

Find the best match in UniProt

Protein Sequence (213 amino acids)

>ABCV34_RS15240 molybdenum cofactor guanylyltransferase MobA (Castellaniella sp019104865 MT123)
MNVNRSDDPPSRVGDPVCPASWLDGLILAGGQSRRMRTPVAPDADKGLRDWRGRPLVDYV
CRYLRGQGIDRILISANRHPDAYARYGQVVRDDADLADCGPLAGILAGLRQARAPWLFVL
PVDVIRWPDDLMGRLAQAASPDHPAYARTPDGPHPLCLVVHRSSAASLAAFLQSGQRQAQ
AWLRDCQARPVDFPDPDCLVNLNTPEDWSRWEG