Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Gene | Dcx |
Protein Name | DCX_MOUSE |
Organism | Mus musculus (Mouse) |
Alternative name(s) | Neuronal migration protein doublecortin (Doublin) (Lissencephalin-X) (Lis-X) |
Protein Family | N/A |
NCBI Gene ID | 13193 |
UniProt ID | O88809 |
Enzyme Class | - |
Molecular Weight | 40613 |
Protein Length | 366 |
Protein Domain | InterPro | Pfam |
3D Structure |
PDBe |
PDBj |
RCSB PDB |
DrugPort
ModBase | SwissModel |
Gene Expression | Gene Expression Atlas |
Function and Disease | OMIM |
Protein-protein Interaction Database | STRING | IntAct | MINT |
Kinase Database | Phospho.ELM | PhosphoSite | NetworKIN |
Catalytic Activity (UniProt annotation) | - |
Localization | Cytoplasm |
Function (UniProt annotation) | Microtubule-associated protein required for initial steps of neuronal dispersion and cortex lamination during cerebral cortex development. May act by competing with the putative neuronal protein kinase DCLK1 in binding to a target protein. May in that way participate in a signaling pathway that is crucial for neuronal interaction before and during migration, possibly as part of a calcium ion-dependent signal transduction pathway. May participate along with PAFAH1B1/LIS-1 in a distinct overlapping signaling pathway that promotes neuronal migration. |
Gene Ontology | GO:0001764; GO:0005737; GO:0005829; GO:0005874; GO:0005930; GO:0007420; GO:0008017; GO:0019901; GO:0021766; GO:0021819; GO:0021860; GO:0021952; GO:0030424; GO:0030425; GO:0030426; GO:0035082; GO:0035556; GO:0042461; GO:0043005; GO:0043025; GO:0045807; GO:0048672; GO:0048675; GO:0048813; GO:0060041 |
Gene Name | Organism | P-Site | Sequence(+/-7) | Conservation | Disorder | Curator Assessment | Reliability | Evidence Class | Evidence Logic | PubMed | Phospho-ELM | PhosphoSite-Plus |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MARK1* (Q9P0L2) | Homo sapiens | S47 | TRTLQALSNEKKAKK | N/A | 0.2645 | TP | likely | experimental | 214 | | 14741102 | - |
|
Reactome Pathways
No KEGG pathways found
No NCI Nature pathways found