BTN3A3

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Butyrophilin, subfamily 3, member A3
Identifiers
Symbol(s) BTN3A3; BTF3
External IDs HomoloGene88752
RNA expression pattern

More reference expression data

Orthologs
Human Mouse
Entrez 10384 n/a
Ensembl ENSG00000111801 n/a
Uniprot O00478 n/a
Refseq NM_006994 (mRNA)
NP_008925 (protein)
n/a (mRNA)
n/a (protein)
Location Chr 6: 26.55 - 26.56 Mb n/a
Pubmed search [1] n/a

Butyrophilin, subfamily 3, member A3, also known as BTN3A3, is a human gene.[1]


[edit] References

[edit] Further reading

  • Henry J, Miller MM, Pontarotti P (1999). "Structure and evolution of the extended B7 family.". Immunol. Today 20 (6): 285–8. PMID 10354554. 
  • Maruyama K, Sugano S (1994). "Oligo-capping: a simple method to replace the cap structure of eukaryotic mRNAs with oligoribonucleotides.". Gene 138 (1-2): 171–4. PMID 8125298. 
  • Ruddy DA, Kronmal GS, Lee VK, et al. (1997). "A 1.1-Mb transcript map of the hereditary hemochromatosis locus.". Genome Res. 7 (5): 441–56. PMID 9149941. 
  • Suzuki Y, Yoshitomo-Nakagawa K, Maruyama K, et al. (1997). "Construction and characterization of a full length-enriched and a 5'-end-enriched cDNA library.". Gene 200 (1-2): 149–56. PMID 9373149. 
  • Rhodes DA, Stammers M, Malcherek G, et al. (2001). "The cluster of BTN genes in the extended major histocompatibility complex.". Genomics 71 (3): 351–62. doi:10.1006/geno.2000.6406. PMID 11170752. 
  • Strausberg RL, Feingold EA, Grouse LH, et al. (2003). "Generation and initial analysis of more than 15,000 full-length human and mouse cDNA sequences.". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99 (26): 16899–903. doi:10.1073/pnas.242603899. PMID 12477932. 
  • Mungall AJ, Palmer SA, Sims SK, et al. (2003). "The DNA sequence and analysis of human chromosome 6.". Nature 425 (6960): 805–11. doi:10.1038/nature02055. PMID 14574404. 
  • Zhang Z, Henzel WJ (2005). "Signal peptide prediction based on analysis of experimentally verified cleavage sites.". Protein Sci. 13 (10): 2819–24. doi:10.1110/ps.04682504. PMID 15340161. 
  • Gerhard DS, Wagner L, Feingold EA, et al. (2004). "The status, quality, and expansion of the NIH full-length cDNA project: the Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC).". Genome Res. 14 (10B): 2121–7. doi:10.1101/gr.2596504. PMID 15489334.