Annotation Overview for fig|257313.1.peg.2904 in Bordetella pertussis Tohama I:
Uroporphyrinogen III decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.37)
| current assignment | Uroporphyrinogen III decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.37) | EC Number | 4.1.1.37 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| taxonomy id | 257313 | contig | |||
| internal links | genome browser | feature evidence | sequence | ACH [?] | show essentially identical genes | ||
| annotation history | run tool | ||||
| FigFam | FIG000428 | ||||
| data base cross references (dbxref) | |||||
This feature is part of a subsystem
Reasons for Current Assignment
We have assigned the function "Uroporphyrinogen III decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.37)" to the encoded
protein. The protein occurs in 2 subsystems: "Experimental tye", and "Heme and Siroheme
Biosynthesis". In "Experimental tye", it appears to play a functional role that we have not
associated with any other gene. In "Heme and Siroheme Biosynthesis", it appears to play a
functional role that we have not associated with any other gene. The function of genes having the
same functional roles have been described in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (1471989, 1576986, 8346678), Homo sapiens (11295834, 11719352, 12071824, 14633982, 15491440, 1634232, 1905636, 2243121, 2920211, 3015909, 3658695, 3775362, 7706766, 8176248, 8644733, 8896428, 9194196, 9564029, 9792863), Bacillus subtilis (1459957, 17122346, 9579061), Rhodobacter sphaeroides (8352737) and Mus musculus (17242355, 8661721). These are homologous proteins which implement the same function.
Compare Regions
The chromosomal region of the focus gene (top) is compared with four similar organisms. The graphic is centered on the focus gene, which is red and numbered 1. Sets of genes with similar sequence are grouped with the same number and color. Genes whose relative position is conserved in at least four other species are functionally coupled and share gray background boxes. The size of the region and the number of genomes may be reset. Click on any arrow in the display to refocus the comparison on that gene. The focus gene always points to the right, even if it is located on the minus strand.


