KEGG   Cuculus canorus (common cuckoo): 104062155
Entry
104062155         CDS       T08597                                 
Symbol
EDN1
Name
(RefSeq) endothelin-1
  KO
K16366  endothelin-1
Organism
cuca  Cuculus canorus (common cuckoo)
Pathway
cuca04080  Neuroactive ligand-receptor interaction
cuca04270  Vascular smooth muscle contraction
cuca04916  Melanogenesis
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:cuca00001]
 09130 Environmental Information Processing
  09133 Signaling molecules and interaction
   04080 Neuroactive ligand-receptor interaction
    104062155 (EDN1)
 09150 Organismal Systems
  09152 Endocrine system
   04916 Melanogenesis
    104062155 (EDN1)
  09153 Circulatory system
   04270 Vascular smooth muscle contraction
    104062155 (EDN1)
 09180 Brite Hierarchies
  09183 Protein families: signaling and cellular processes
   04052 Cytokines and neuropeptides [BR:cuca04052]
    104062155 (EDN1)
Cytokines and neuropeptides [BR:cuca04052]
 Neuropeptides
  GPCR binding
   104062155 (EDN1)
SSDB
Motif
Pfam: Endothelin SOCS
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID: 104062155
NCBI-ProteinID: XP_053914886
LinkDB
Position
2:93266573..93271163
AA seq 200 aa
MDYSQMLVSLLFVLSPGLLHAAPGADAGTAPTPAHRRARRCSCSSLLDEECVYFCHLDII
WINTPEKTVPYGLGGPSRSRRSLKDMVPEMLAEPSNRCRCANQKDKKCLNFCQTGKDLWA
QSTVEKTSRHSNKAGNCIGLKCMSRQLVDSRKIKRLEAIGNSIKASFSIAKLKAELQKGW
KLKHNRANKRQSIWESLKAS
NT seq 603 nt   +upstreamnt  +downstreamnt
atggattattcccagatgctcgtctccctgctcttcgtgctctccccggggctgctgcat
gcagcccccggcgccgatgcgggcaccgcaccgacccccgcgcaccgccgcgcccgccgc
tgctcctgctcctcgctgctggacgaagagtgcgtctacttctgccacctcgacatcatc
tggatcaacactcccgagaagactgttccatatggtctcggaggtccttctcgatccaga
agatcactaaaggacatggtgccagagatgctcgctgaacccagcaacaggtgcagatgc
gccaaccagaaggacaagaaatgtctgaacttctgccaaacaggaaaagatctctgggct
cagtccacggtagagaaaacctcgcgtcacagcaacaaagctggcaattgcatcggactc
aaatgcatgagccgacagcttgttgacagcaggaaaataaagaggctggaagctattggt
aacagtatcaaagcttccttcagcattgcaaagctgaaggctgagctccagaaagggtgg
aagctgaaacataacagggcgaacaaaaggcaaagcatctgggaaagcctgaaagcatcc
tag

DBGET integrated database retrieval system