P2RY11

P2RY11
Available structures
PDBHuman UniProt search: PDBe RCSB
Identifiers
Aliases P2RY11, P2Y11, purinergic receptor P2Y11
External IDs HomoloGene: 130446 GeneCards: P2RY11
Targeted by Drug
adenosine triphosphate, 2'-deoxyadenosine triphosphate, NAADP, 1-amino-4-((4-((4-chloro-6-((3-sulfophenyl)amino)-1,3,5-triazin-2-yl)amino)-3-sulfophenyl)amino)-9,10-dihydro-9,10-dioxo-2-anthracenesulfonic acid, suramin[1]
RNA expression pattern
More reference expression data
Orthologs
Species Human Mouse
Entrez

5032

n/a

Ensembl

ENSG00000244165

n/a

UniProt

Q96G91

n/a

RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_002566

n/a

RefSeq (protein)

NP_002557.2

n/a

Location (UCSC) Chr 19: 10.11 – 10.12 Mb n/a
PubMed search [2] n/a
Wikidata
View/Edit Human

P2Y purinoceptor 11 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the P2RY11 gene.[3][4]

The product of this gene, P2Y11, belongs to the family of G-protein coupled receptors. This family has several receptor subtypes with different pharmacological selectivity, which overlaps in some cases, for various adenosine and uridine nucleotides. This receptor is coupled to the stimulation of the phosphoinositide and adenylyl cyclase pathways and behaves as a selective purinoceptor. Naturally occurring read-through transcripts, resulting from intergenic splicing between this gene and an immediately upstream gene (PPAN, encoding peter pan homolog), have been found. The PPAN-P2RY11 read-through mRNA is ubiquitously expressed and encodes a fusion protein that shares identity with each individual gene product.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Drugs that physically interact with P2Y purinoceptor 11 view/edit references on wikidata".
  2. "Human PubMed Reference:".
  3. Communi D, Govaerts C, Parmentier M, Boeynaems JM (Jan 1998). "Cloning of a human purinergic P2Y receptor coupled to phospholipase C and adenylyl cyclase". J Biol Chem. 272 (51): 31969–73. doi:10.1074/jbc.272.51.31969. PMID 9405388.
  4. 1 2 "Entrez Gene: P2RY11 purinergic receptor P2Y, G-protein coupled, 11".

Further reading

This article incorporates text from the United States National Library of Medicine, which is in the public domain.


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