BBa_K1621006
1
BBa_K1621006
Dihydroxyacid dehydratase (Salmonella Typhimurium)
2015-08-27T11:00:00Z
2015-09-11T05:56:16Z
The part is derived from Salmonella typhimurium. The sequence as well an expression plasmid carrying the part in a His-tagged variant were obtained from Meyer et al. (2012).
This part contains the coding sequence of the enzyme dihydroxyacid dehydratase from //Salmonella typhimurium//. Its main biological function is the dehydratation of 2,3-dihydroxy-isovaleic acid into alpha-ketoisovaleric acid in the biosynthesis of isoleucine and valine.
Additionally, the protein is immunogenic in humans as it was shown by the group of Prof. Dr. Michael Hust at TU Braunschweig (Meyer //et al.//, 2012). This is why the part can be used for diagnostic purposes concerning //S. typhimurium//. The sequence as well as an expression plasmid carrying its sequence in a His-tagged variant was obtained directly from this group.
false
false
_2038_
25598
25598
9
false
Two recognition sites for PstI have been removed by site-directed mutagenesis. Therefore, the guanine residues at positions 96 and 679 have been mutated into cytosines. This results in one silent mutation and an amino acid exchange from alanine to proline at position 227 of the primary structure.
false
Ramona Emig, Rabea Jesser, Julika Neumann, Lara Stuehn
BBa_K1621006_sequence
1
atgcaggtcctggtggatgattgctatggtgaaagtcatccgggcagtttccatcttaaccaactgggcgatgaagccgtgctgggtgttcatgaaagcggcggtcgcgcggtccgtcaccatgtgacggatatctgcgacggctggggtcagggccacgatgggatgaactacatcctggcatctcgcgaagccattgccaacatggtcgaaattcatgcctcagtggtgccttatgatgccggtattctgatctcaagctgcgataaatctatcccggcgcatctgattgccgccgcacgcctgaacctgccgctactgcatattcccggcggttctatgcgtccggcaccgaatatgagtacttctgacctcggtgggatcactgctaagttgaagaaaggcgaaatcggcattcagcaagtggaagccatgcagcaatgcggttgccccaccgccggagcctgccagtttatgggaacggccagtaccatgcagtgcatgtcggaggccttggggctggccctgccaggcagcgctttgctgccatcgaccctggcggaaattcgccgcgttgccagaact
igem2sbol
1
iGEM to SBOL conversion
Conversion of the iGEM parts registry to SBOL2.1
Chris J. Myers
James Alastair McLaughlin
2017-03-06T15:00:00.000Z