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EFNB3

EFNB3, a member of the ephrin gene family, is important in brain development as well as in its maintenance. Moreover, since levels of EFNB3 expression were particularly high in several forebrain subregions compared to other brain subregions, it may play a pivotal role in forebrain function. The EPH and EPH-related receptors comprise the largest subfamily of receptor protein-tyrosine kinases and have been implicated in mediating developmental events, particularly in the nervous system. EPH Receptors typically have a single kinase domain and an extracellular region containing a Cys-rich domain and 2 fibronectin type III repeats. The ephrin ligands and receptors have been named by the Eph Nomenclature Committee (1997). Based on their structures and sequence relationships, ephrins are divided into the ephrin-A (EFNA) class, which are anchored to the membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol linkage, and the ephrin-B (EFNB) class, which are transmembrane proteins. The Eph family of receptors are similarly divided into 2 groups based on the similarity of their extracellular domain sequences and their affinities for binding ephrin-A and ephrin-B ligands.
Protein class

Cancer-related genes

Predicted location

Membrane

Single cell type specificity

Cell type enhanced (Breast myoepithelial cells, Early spermatids, Excitatory neurons)

Immune cell specificity

Not detected in immune cells

Cell line specificity

Cell line enhanced (AF22, AN3-CA, hTERT-RPE1, SH-SY5Y)

Interaction

Interacts with GRIP1 and GRIP2. (Microbial infection) Interacts with nipah virus and hendra virus glycoprotein (PubMed:16477309, PubMed:17376907).

Molecular function

Developmental protein, Host cell receptor for virus entry, Receptor

More Types Infomation

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For Research Use Only. Not For Clinical Use.

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