Gavia stellata (red-throated loon): 104251875
Help
Entry
104251875 CDS
T08384
Symbol
PDGFA
Name
(RefSeq) platelet-derived growth factor subunit A
KO
K04359
platelet-derived growth factor subunit A
Organism
gste
Gavia stellata (red-throated loon)
Pathway
gste04010
MAPK signaling pathway
gste04020
Calcium signaling pathway
gste04510
Focal adhesion
gste04540
Gap junction
gste04810
Regulation of actin cytoskeleton
Brite
KEGG Orthology (KO) [BR:
gste00001
]
09130 Environmental Information Processing
09132 Signal transduction
04010 MAPK signaling pathway
104251875 (PDGFA)
04020 Calcium signaling pathway
104251875 (PDGFA)
09140 Cellular Processes
09144 Cellular community - eukaryotes
04510 Focal adhesion
104251875 (PDGFA)
04540 Gap junction
104251875 (PDGFA)
09142 Cell motility
04810 Regulation of actin cytoskeleton
104251875 (PDGFA)
09180 Brite Hierarchies
09183 Protein families: signaling and cellular processes
04052 Cytokines and neuropeptides [BR:
gste04052
]
104251875 (PDGFA)
00536 Glycosaminoglycan binding proteins [BR:
gste00536
]
104251875 (PDGFA)
Cytokines and neuropeptides [BR:
gste04052
]
Cytokines
Growth factors (RTK binding)
104251875 (PDGFA)
Glycosaminoglycan binding proteins [BR:
gste00536
]
Heparan sulfate / Heparin
Growth factors/receptors
104251875 (PDGFA)
BRITE hierarchy
SSDB
Ortholog
Paralog
GFIT
Motif
Pfam:
PDGF
PDGF_N
Motif
Other DBs
NCBI-GeneID:
104251875
NCBI-ProteinID:
XP_009819717
LinkDB
All DBs
Position
Unknown
AA seq
116 aa
AA seq
DB search
YDDVSETNLRSYSVHSAKHVQENRPVPIRRKRSIEEAIPAVCKTRTVIYEIPRSQIDPTS
ANFLIWPPCVEVKRCTGCCNTSSVKCQPSRIHHRSVKVSKWWPQSPKRVLLNLKTP
NT seq
351 nt
NT seq
+upstream
nt +downstream
nt
gatatgatgatgtttcagaaacaaacttgagatcttatagtgttcattctgctaaacatg
tgcaagagaatcgtcctgtgcccattcgcagaaaaagaagcattgaggaagccatcccgg
ctgtctgcaaaacacggacggttatatacgagatacctcggagtcagattgatcccacct
ctgccaacttcctgatatggccgccctgcgtggaggtgaaacgttgcacgggctgttgca
acaccagcagcgtgaaatgccagccatcgcggatacatcacagaagtgtcaaggtgagca
aatggtggccgcagagccctaagagggtcctcttaaacctaaaaactccag
DBGET
integrated database retrieval system