Calpastatin

Protein found in humans From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Calpastatin is a protein that in humans is encoded by the CAST gene.[5][6][7][8]

Quick facts CAST, Identifiers ...
CAST
Identifiers
AliasesCAST, BS-17, PLACK, calpastatin
External IDsOMIM: 114090; MGI: 1098236; HomoloGene: 7658; GeneCards: CAST; OMA:CAST - orthologs
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)
RefSeq (protein)
Location (UCSC)Chr 5: 96.53 – 96.78 MbChr 13: 74.84 – 74.96 Mb
PubMed search[3][4]
Wikidata
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The protein encoded by this gene is an endogenous calpain (calcium-dependent cysteine protease) inhibitor. It consists of an N-terminal domain L and four repetitive calpain-inhibition domains (domains 1–4), and it is involved in the proteolysis of amyloid precursor protein.[citation needed] The calpain/calpastatin system is involved in numerous membrane fusion events, such as neural vesicle exocytosis and platelet and red-cell aggregation. The encoded protein is also thought to affect the expression levels of genes encoding structural or regulatory proteins. Several alternatively spliced transcript variants of this gene have been described, but the full-length natures of only some have been determined.[8]

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