Basic Information
Gene Structure
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Domain
| Database | EntryID | E-Value | Start | end | InterPro ID | Description |
|---|
Regulation&Interaction
Annotation
Orthologous Group
| Orthologous ID | Species Number | All hits in PereRegDB | Hits of this species | Orthologous Detail |
|---|
Expression Profile
| DataSet | Number of Samples expressed(TPM>1) | Mean | Min | Max | Standard deviation(SD) | Coeffcient variation(CV) |
|---|
Pathway
| GO Term | Description | GO Category |
|---|---|---|
| GO:0005575 | cellular_component | CC |
| GO:0005622 | intracellular anatomical structure | CC |
| GO:0005623 | obsolete cell | CC |
| GO:0005634 | nucleus | CC |
| GO:0005737 | cytoplasm | CC |
| GO:0005829 | cytosol | CC |
| GO:0043226 | organelle | CC |
| GO:0043227 | membrane-bounded organelle | CC |
| GO:0043229 | intracellular organelle | CC |
| GO:0043231 | intracellular membrane-bounded organelle | CC |
| GO:0044424 | obsolete intracellular part | CC |
| GO:0044444 | obsolete cytoplasmic part | CC |
| GO:0044464 | obsolete cell part | CC |
| KEGG Term | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| map03018 | RNA degradation | The correct processing, quality control and turnover of cellular RNA molecules are critical to many aspects in the expression of genetic information. In eukaryotes, two major pathways of mRNA decay exist and both pathways are initiated by poly(A) shortening of the mRNA. In the 5' to 3' pathway, this is followed by decapping which then permits the 5' to 3' exonucleolytic degradation of transcripts. In the 3' to 5' pathway, the exosome, a large multisubunit complex, plays a key role. The exosome exists in archaeal cells, too. In bacteria, endoribonuclease E, a key enzyme involved in RNA decay and processing, organizes a protein complex called degradosome. RNase E or R interacts with the phosphate-dependent exoribonuclease polynucleotide phosphorylase, DEAD-box helicases, and additional factors in the RNA-degrading complex. |
| map01110 | Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites | - |
| map01100 | Metabolic pathways | - |
| map00010 | Glycolysis / Gluconeogenesis | Glycolysis is the process of converting glucose into pyruvate and generating small amounts of ATP (energy) and NADH (reducing power). It is a central pathway that produces important precursor metabolites: six-carbon compounds of glucose-6P and fructose-6P and three-carbon compounds of glycerone-P, glyceraldehyde-3P, glycerate-3P, phosphoenolpyruvate, and pyruvate [MD:M00001]. Acetyl-CoA, another important precursor metabolite, is produced by oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate [MD:M00307]. When the enzyme genes of this pathway are examined in completely sequenced genomes, the reaction steps of three-carbon compounds from glycerone-P to pyruvate form a conserved core module [MD:M00002], which is found in almost all organisms and which often corresponds to operon structures in bacterial genomes. Gluconeogenesis is a synthesis pathway of glucose from noncarbohydrate precursors. It is essentially a reversal of glycolysis with minor variations of alternative paths [MD:M00003]. |

