PMID: 8950168Nov 11, 1996Paper

A tick homologue of the human Ki nuclear autoantigen

Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta
G C Paesen, P A Nuttall

Abstract

A clone isolated from a tick salivary gland cDNA library encodes a homologue of the human Ki lupus autoantigen, a protein of unknown function that is related to the subunits of the PA28 proteasome activator. The Ki sequences appear to be well conserved between mammals and invertebrates, with 55% identity between the tick and human primary structures. This is the first report of a Ki homologue in invertebrates.

References

May 25, 1975·Journal of Molecular Biology·F Sanger, A R Coulson
Nov 1, 1991·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·D A RaftosG Beck
Oct 5, 1990·Journal of Molecular Biology·S F AltschulD J Lipman
Jan 1, 1987·Methods in Enzymology·R C Mierendorf, D Pfeffer
Feb 11, 1988·Nucleic Acids Research·S A MillerH F Polesky
Oct 1, 1986·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·G Beck, G S Habicht
Mar 1, 1993·Clinical and Experimental Immunology·J G RoutsiasH M Moutsopoulos
Jan 17, 1995·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·V UstrellM Rechsteiner
Sep 15, 1993·Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications·E OttavianiC Franceschi
Mar 1, 1996·Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta·G C PaesenP A Nuttall
Jun 1, 2007·The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience·Cyril HerryErich Seifritz
Jun 20, 2013·The Journal of Biological Chemistry·Zong WeiWange Lu

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

May 19, 2000·Journal of Insect Physiology·J R SauerA S Bowman
Feb 27, 1999·Current Opinion in Immunology·K Früh, Y Yang
Jun 10, 2000·Scandinavian Journal of Immunology·B W MurrayJ Klein
Feb 26, 1998·Cell·W BaumeisterE Seemüller
Apr 28, 2009·Journal of Molecular Biology·Guido C PaesenRobert M Esnouf
Nov 17, 2020·Frontiers in Oncology·Kexin LeiQianming Chen
Feb 24, 2001·Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics·S WilkR P Magnusson
May 11, 1999·Drug Discovery Today·M Groettrup, G Schmidtke

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Autoimmune Diseases

Autoimmune diseases occur as a result of an attack by the immune system on the body’s own tissues resulting in damage and dysfunction. There are different types of autoimmune diseases, in which there is a complex and unknown interaction between genetics and the environment. Discover the latest research on autoimmune diseases here.