Details for: Vps35
Associated with
Other Information
Genular Protein ID: 286152309
Symbol: VPS35_MOUSE
Name: Vacuolar protein sorting-associated protein 35
UniProtKB Accession Codes:
Database IDs:
Citations:
PubMed ID: 8678978
Title: Genetic mapping and embryonic expression of a novel, maternally transcribed gene Mem3.
PubMed ID: 8678978
PubMed ID: 11112353
Title: Cloning and characterization of human VPS35 and mouse Vps35 and mapping of VPS35 to human chromosome 16q13-q21.
PubMed ID: 11112353
PubMed ID: 15489334
Title: The status, quality, and expansion of the NIH full-length cDNA project: the Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC).
PubMed ID: 15489334
DOI: 10.1101/gr.2596504
PubMed ID: 16190980
Title: A novel mammalian retromer component, Vps26B.
PubMed ID: 16190980
PubMed ID: 17947660
Title: Quantitative time-resolved phosphoproteomic analysis of mast cell signaling.
PubMed ID: 17947660
PubMed ID: 19131326
Title: Large scale localization of protein phosphorylation by use of electron capture dissociation mass spectrometry.
PubMed ID: 19131326
PubMed ID: 21040701
Title: Implication of mouse Vps26b-Vps29-Vps35 retromer complex in sortilin trafficking.
PubMed ID: 21040701
PubMed ID: 21183079
Title: A tissue-specific atlas of mouse protein phosphorylation and expression.
PubMed ID: 21183079
PubMed ID: 20875039
Title: Assembly and solution structure of the core retromer protein complex.
PubMed ID: 20875039
PubMed ID: 21920005
Title: Vps26A and Vps26B subunits define distinct retromer complexes.
PubMed ID: 21920005
PubMed ID: 23395371
Title: RAB7L1 interacts with LRRK2 to modify intraneuronal protein sorting and Parkinson's disease risk.
PubMed ID: 23395371
PubMed ID: 28469074
Title: SorCS2-mediated NR2A trafficking regulates motor deficits in Huntington's disease.
PubMed ID: 28469074
Sequence Information:
- Length: 796
- Mass: 91713
- Checksum: 2ABD338111D641CC
- Sequence:
MPTTQQSPQD EQEKLLDEAI QAVKVQSFQM KRCLDKNKLM DALKHASNML GELRTSMLSP KSYYELYMAI SDELHYLEVY LTDEFAKGRK VADLYELVQY AGNIIPRLYL LITVGVVYVK SFPQSRKDIL KDLVEMCRGV QHPLRGLFLR NYLLQCTRNI LPDEGEPTDE ETTGDISDSM DFVLLNFAEM NKLWVRMQHQ GHSRDREKRE RERQELRILV GTNLVRLSQL EGVNVERYKQ IVLTGILEQV VNCRDALAQE YLMECIIQVF PDEFHLQTLN PFLRACAELH QNVNVKNIII ALIDRLALFA HREDGPGIPA EIKLFDIFSQ QVATVIQSRQ DMPSEDVVSL QVSLINLAMK CYPDRVDYVD KVLETTVEIF NKLNLEHIAT SSAVSKELTR LLKIPVDTYN NILTVLKLKH FHPLFEYFDY ESRKSMSCYV LSNVLDYNTE IVSQDQVDSI MNLVSTLIQD QPDQPVEDPD PEDFADEQSL VGRFIHLLRS DDPDQQYLIL NTARKHFGAG GNQRIRFTLP PLVFAAYQLA FRYKENSQMD DKWEKKCQKI FSFAHQTISA LIKAELAELP LRLFLQGALA AGEIGFENHE TVAYEFMSQA FSLYEDEISD SKAQLAAITL IIGTFERMKC FSEENHEPLR TQCALAASKL LKKPDQGRAV STCAHLFWSG RNTDKNGEEL HGGKRVMECL KKALKIANQC MDPSLQVQLF IEILNRYIYF YEKENDAVTI QVLNQLIQKI REDLPNLESS EETEQINKHF HNTLEHLRSR RESPESEGPI YEGLIL
Database document:
This is a preview of the gene's schema. Only a few entries are kept for 'singleCellExpressions,' 'mRNAExpressions,' and other large data arrays for visualization purposes. You can zoom in with the mouse wheel for a closer view, and the text will adjust automatically if necessary. For the full schema, download it here.