U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

DICPUDRAFT_88818 uncharacterized protein [ Dictyostelium purpureum ]

Gene ID: 10504483, updated on 17-May-2024

Summary

Gene symbol
DICPUDRAFT_88818
Gene description
uncharacterized protein
Locus tag
DICPUDRAFT_88818
See related
AmoebaDB:DICPUDRAFT_88818; VEuPathDB:DICPUDRAFT_88818
Gene type
protein coding
RefSeq status
PROVISIONAL
Organism
Dictyostelium purpureum (strain: QSDP1)
Lineage
Eukaryota; Amoebozoa; Evosea; Eumycetozoa; Dictyostelia; Dictyosteliales; Dictyosteliaceae; Dictyostelium
NEW
Try the new Gene table
Try the new Transcript table

Genomic context

See DICPUDRAFT_88818 in Genome Data Viewer
Location:
chromosome: Unknown
Exon count:
4

NW_003519543.1Genomic Context describing neighboring genes Neighboring gene uncharacterized protein Neighboring gene uncharacterized protein Neighboring gene uncharacterized protein Neighboring gene uncharacterized protein

General protein information

Preferred Names
uncharacterized protein
XP_003290127.1
  • putative glycosyltransferase

NCBI Reference Sequences (RefSeq)

NEW Try the new Transcript table

Genome Annotation

The following sections contain reference sequences that belong to a specific genome build. Explain

Reference assembly

Genomic

  1. NW_003519543.1 Reference assembly

    Range
    32567..33906
    Download
    GenBank, FASTA, Sequence Viewer (Graphics)

mRNA and Protein(s)

  1. XM_003290079.1XP_003290127.1  uncharacterized protein DICPUDRAFT_88818 [Dictyostelium purpureum]

    See identical proteins and their annotated locations for XP_003290127.1

    Status: PROVISIONAL

    UniProtKB/TrEMBL
    F0ZRT5
    Conserved Domains (2) summary
    pfam08660
    Location:201366
    Alg14; Oligosaccharide biosynthesis protein Alg14 like
    cl10013
    Location:6191
    Glycosyltransferase_GTB_type; 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 ...