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ABAT

4-aminobutyrate aminotransferase (ABAT) is responsible for catabolism of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), an important, mostly inhibitory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system, into succinic semialdehyde. The active enzyme is a homodimer of 50-kD subunits complexed to pyridoxal-5-phosphate. The protein sequence is over 95% similar to the pig protein. GABA is estimated to be present in nearly one-third of human synapses. ABAT in liver and brain is controlled by 2 codominant alleles with a frequency in a Caucasian population of 0.56 and 0.44. The ABAT deficiency phenotype includes psychomotor retardation, hypotonia, hyperreflexia, lethargy, refractory seizures, and EEG abnormalities. Multiple alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding the same protein isoform have been found for this gene.
Protein class

Disease related genes, Enzymes, FDA approved drug targets, Human disease related genes, Metabolic proteins, Plasma proteins

Predicted location

Intracellular

Single cell type specificity

Cell type enhanced (Hepatocytes, Inhibitory neurons, Proximal tubular cells, Oligodendrocyte precursor cells)

Immune cell specificity

Low immune cell specificity

Cell line specificity

Cell line enhanced (Hep G2, MCF7, RH-30, T-47d)

Interaction

Homodimer; disulfide-linked.

Molecular function

Aminotransferase, Transferase

More Types Infomation

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For Research Use Only. Not For Clinical Use.

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