Since the most exciting new source of nitrile hydratase sequences has been marine organisms recently, I thought I would have a quick look at the preponderance of nitrile hydratase sequences in marine bacteria. I decided to look at the Moore Foundation's Marine Microbiology Initiative which was run by JCVI. I used the alpha sequence from the nitrile hydratase from Rhodopseudomonas palustris CGA009 as a probe sequence and BLASTped this sequence against the genomes produced by this initiative. This was a slightly more tedious job than I imagined because the BLAST server at JCVI wasn't working, so I had to work through a NCBI BLASTp input, which involves a fair bit of cutting and pasting, AND the taxonomy of the names listed isn't always the same in both databases. Anyway, of the 177 marine microbes which had their genomes listed, 30 produced sequences which had query coverages of greater than 68%, and all were auto-annotated as nitrile hydratase alpha subunits and contained the appropriate metal binding sequence.
Thursday, 14 July 2011
Nitrile hydratases and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s Marine Microbiology Initiative
Labels:
BLASTp,
JCVI,
Rhodopseudomonas palustris CGA009
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