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CAZyme Information: MGYG000000672_01373

You are here: Home > Sequence: MGYG000000672_01373

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 RC9 sp000431015
Lineage Bacteria; Bacteroidota; Bacteroidia; Bacteroidales; UBA932; RC9; RC9 sp000431015
CAZyme ID MGYG000000672_01373
CAZy Family GH38
CAZyme Description hypothetical protein
CAZyme Property
Protein Length CGC Molecular Weight Isoelectric Point
852 MGYG000000672_12|CGC1 95573.4 5.2505
Genome Property
Genome Assembly ID Genome Size Genome Type Country Continent
MGYG000000672 2733599 MAG Kazakhstan Asia
Gene Location Start: 29587;  End: 32145  Strand: +

Full Sequence      Download help

Enzyme Prediction      help

No EC number prediction in MGYG000000672_01373.

CAZyme Signature Domains help

Family Start End Evalue family coverage
GH38 56 241 4e-30 0.6840148698884758

CDD Domains      download full data without filtering help

Cdd ID Domain E-Value qStart qEnd sStart sEnd Domain Description
COG0383 AMS1 1.11e-21 117 849 286 941
Alpha-mannosidase [Carbohydrate transport and metabolism].
pfam01074 Glyco_hydro_38 1.09e-11 87 277 60 255
Glycosyl hydrolases family 38 N-terminal domain. Glycosyl hydrolases are key enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism.
cd10786 GH38N_AMII_like 2.16e-10 62 230 37 205
N-terminal catalytic domain of class II alpha-mannosidases and similar proteins; glycoside hydrolase family 38 (GH38). Alpha-mannosidases (EC 3.2.1.24) are extensively found in eukaryotes and play important roles in the processing of newly formed N-glycans and in degradation of mature glycoproteins. A deficiency of this enzyme causes the lysosomal storage disease alpha-mannosidosis. Many bacterial and archaeal species also possess putative alpha-mannosidases, but their activity and specificity is largely unknown. Based on different functional characteristics and sequence homology, alpha-mannosidases have been organized into two classes (class I, belonging to glycoside hydrolase family 47, and class II, belonging to glycoside hydrolase family 38). Members of this family corresponds to class II alpha-mannosidases (alphaMII), which contain intermediate Golgi alpha-mannosidases II, acidic lysosomal alpha-mannosidases, animal sperm and epididymal alpha -mannosidases, neutral ER/cytosolic alpha-mannosidases, and some putative prokaryotic alpha-mannosidases. AlphaMII possess a-1,3, a-1,6, and a-1,2 hydrolytic activity, and catalyzes the degradation of N-linked oligosaccharides. The N-terminal catalytic domain of alphaMII adopts a structure consisting of parallel 7-stranded beta/alpha barrel. Members in this family are retaining glycosyl hydrolases of family GH38 that employs a two-step mechanism involving the formation of a covalent glycosyl enzyme complex. Two carboxylic acids positioned within the active site act in concert: one as a catalytic nucleophile and the other as a general acid/base catalyst.
cd10789 GH38N_AMII_ER_cytosolic 4.19e-10 59 219 33 192
N-terminal catalytic domain of endoplasmic reticulum(ER)/cytosolic class II alpha-mannosidases; glycoside hydrolase family 38 (GH38). The subfamily is represented by Saccharomyces cerevisiae vacuolar alpha-mannosidase Ams1, rat ER/cytosolic alpha-mannosidase Man2C1, and similar proteins. Members in this family share high sequence similarity. None of them have any classical signal sequence or membrane spanning domains, which are typical of sorting or targeting signals. Ams1 functions as a second resident vacuolar hydrolase in S. cerevisiae. It aids in recycling macromolecular components of the cell through hydrolysis of terminal, non-reducing alpha-d-mannose residues. Ams1 utilizes both the cytoplasm to vacuole targeting (Cvt, nutrient-rich conditions) and autophagic (starvation conditions) pathways for biosynthetic delivery to the vacuole. Man2C1is involved in oligosaccharide catabolism in both the ER and cytosol. It can catalyze the cobalt-dependent cleavage of alpha 1,2-, alpha 1,3-, and alpha 1,6-linked mannose residues. Members in this family are retaining glycosyl hydrolases of family GH38 that employs a two-step mechanism involving the formation of a covalent glycosyl-enzyme complex. Two carboxylic acids positioned within the active site act in concert: one as a catalytic nucleophile and the other as a general acid/base catalyst.
cd10815 GH38N_AMII_EcMngB_like 6.22e-07 58 202 32 170
N-terminal catalytic domain of Escherichia coli alpha-mannosidase MngB and its bacterial homologs; glycoside hydrolase family 38 (GH38). The bacterial subfamily is represented by Escherichia coli alpha-mannosidase MngB, which is encoded by the mngB gene (previously called ybgG). MngB exhibits alpha-mannosidase activity that converts 2-O-(6-phospho-alpha-mannosyl)-D-glycerate to mannose-6-phosphate and glycerate in the pathway which enables use of mannosyl-D-glycerate as a sole carbon source. A divalent metal ion is required for its activity.

CAZyme Hits      help

Hit ID E-Value Query Start Query End Hit Start Hit End
BBL11622.1 0.0 16 849 39 881
BBL00893.1 0.0 16 849 40 880
BBL08830.1 0.0 16 849 39 881
BBL06663.1 2.74e-314 14 849 32 878
QUR41760.1 9.40e-301 32 849 19 851

PDB Hits      help

has no PDB hit.

Swiss-Prot Hits      help

has no Swissprot hit.

SignalP and Lipop Annotations help

This protein is predicted as SP

Other SP_Sec_SPI LIPO_Sec_SPII TAT_Tat_SPI TATLIP_Sec_SPII PILIN_Sec_SPIII
0.000413 0.998911 0.000217 0.000165 0.000137 0.000132

TMHMM  Annotations      help

There is no transmembrane helices in MGYG000000672_01373.