Zyxin

Protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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

Quick facts ZYX, Identifiers ...
ZYX
Identifiers
AliasesZYX, ESP-2, HED-2, zyxin
External IDsOMIM: 602002; MGI: 103072; HomoloGene: 31164; GeneCards: ZYX; OMA:ZYX - orthologs
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_001010972
NM_003461
NM_001362783

NM_001289617
NM_001289618
NM_001289619
NM_011777

RefSeq (protein)

NP_001010972
NP_003452
NP_001349712

NP_001276546
NP_001276547
NP_001276548
NP_035907

Location (UCSC)Chr 7: 143.38 – 143.39 MbChr 6: 42.33 – 42.34 Mb
PubMed search[3][4]
Wikidata
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Function

Focal adhesions are actin-rich structures that enable cells to adhere to the extracellular matrix and at which protein complexes involved in signal transduction assemble. Zyxin is a zinc-binding phosphoprotein that concentrates at focal adhesions and along the actin cytoskeleton. Zyxin has an N-terminal proline-rich domain and three LIM domains in its C-terminal half. The proline-rich domain may interact with SH3 domains of proteins involved in signal transduction pathways while the LIM domains are likely involved in protein-protein binding. Zyxin may function as a messenger in the signal transduction pathway that mediates adhesion-stimulated changes in gene expression and may modulate the cytoskeletal organization of actin bundles. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants that encode the same isoform.[7]

Interactions

References

Further reading

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