PROSC

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Proline synthetase co-transcribed homolog (bacterial)
Identifiers
Symbol(s) PROSC; FLJ11861
External IDs OMIM: 604436 MGI1891207 HomoloGene5211
RNA expression pattern

More reference expression data

Orthologs
Human Mouse
Entrez 11212 114863
Ensembl ENSG00000147471 ENSMUSG00000031485
Uniprot O94903 Q544R1
Refseq NM_007198 (mRNA)
NP_009129 (protein)
NM_001039077 (mRNA)
NP_001034166 (protein)
Location Chr 8: 37.74 - 37.76 Mb Chr 8: 28.51 - 28.52 Mb
Pubmed search [1] [2]

Proline synthetase co-transcribed homolog (bacterial), also known as PROSC, is a human gene.[1]


[edit] References

[edit] Further reading

  • 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. 
  • Ota T, Suzuki Y, Nishikawa T, et al. (2004). "Complete sequencing and characterization of 21,243 full-length human cDNAs.". Nat. Genet. 36 (1): 40-5. doi:10.1038/ng1285. PMID 14702039. 
  • 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. 
  • Simpson JC, Wellenreuther R, Poustka A, et al. (2001). "Systematic subcellular localization of novel proteins identified by large-scale cDNA sequencing.". EMBO Rep. 1 (3): 287-92. doi:10.1093/embo-reports/kvd058. PMID 11256614. 
  • Wiemann S, Weil B, Wellenreuther R, et al. (2001). "Toward a catalog of human genes and proteins: sequencing and analysis of 500 novel complete protein coding human cDNAs.". Genome Res. 11 (3): 422-35. doi:10.1101/gr.154701. PMID 11230166. 
  • Ikegawa S, Isomura M, Koshizuka Y, Nakamura Y (1999). "Cloning and characterization of human and mouse PROSC (proline synthetase co-transcribed) genes.". J. Hum. Genet. 44 (5): 337-42. PMID 10496079. 
  • Bonaldo MF, Lennon G, Soares MB (1997). "Normalization and subtraction: two approaches to facilitate gene discovery.". Genome Res. 6 (9): 791-806. PMID 8889548.