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Browse result for Down-regulation in Autophosphorylation
※ introduction Autophosphorylation is a type of post-translational modification of proteins. It is generally defined as the phosphorylation of the kinase by itself. In eukaryotes, this process occurs by the addition of a phosphate group to serine, threonine or tyrosine residues within protein kinases, normally to regulate the catalytic activity. Autophosphorylation may occur when a kinases' own active site catalyzes the phosphorylation reaction (cis autophosphorylation), or when another kinase of the same type provides the active site that carries out the chemistry (trans autophosphorylation). The latter often occurs when kinase molecules dimerize. In general, the phosphate groups introduced are gamma phosphates from nucleoside triphosphates, most commonly ATP.
Reference
Wiki: Autophosphorylation
Reference
Wiki: Autophosphorylation
| PTMD ID | UniProt Accession | Entrez ID | Gene Name | Protein Name | Organism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTMD00062 | O43353 | 8767 | RIPK2 | Receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 2 | Homo sapiens |
| PTMD00211 | Q9UHD2 | 29110 | TBK1 | Serine/threonine-protein kinase TBK1 | Homo sapiens |
| PTMD00510 | P06239 | 3932 | LCK | Tyrosine-protein kinase Lck | Homo sapiens |
| PTMD01591 | P31324 | 19088 | Prkar2b | cAMP-dependent protein kinase type II-beta regulatory subunit | Mus musculus |
