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Decoy receptor 2

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Headbomb (talk | contribs) at 22:24, 2 July 2016 (Further reading: clean up, replaced: Swiss medical weekly : official journal of the Swiss Society of Infectious Diseases, the Swiss Society of Internal Medicine, the Swiss Society of Pneumology → Swiss Medical Weekly using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

TNFRSF10D
Identifiers
AliasesTNFRSF10D, CD264, DCR2, TRAIL-R4, TRAILR4, TRUNDD, tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily member 10d, TNF receptor superfamily member 10d
External IDsOMIM: 603614; HomoloGene: 136778; GeneCards: TNFRSF10D; OMA:TNFRSF10D - orthologs
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_003840

n/a

RefSeq (protein)

NP_003831

n/a

Location (UCSC)Chr 8: 23.14 – 23.16 Mbn/a
PubMed search[2]n/a
Wikidata
View/Edit Human

Decoy receptor 2 (DCR2), also known as TRAIL receptor 4 (TRAILR4) and tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily member 10D (TNFRSF10D), is a human cell surface receptor of the TNF-receptor superfamily.[3][4][5]

Function

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References

  1. ^ a b c GRCh38: Ensembl release 89: ENSG00000173530Ensembl, May 2017
  2. ^ "Human PubMed Reference:". National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine.
  3. ^ Marsters SA, Sheridan JP, Pitti RM, Huang A, Skubatch M, Baldwin D, Yuan J, Gurney A, Goddard AD, Godowski P, Ashkenazi A (Feb 1998). "A novel receptor for Apo2L/TRAIL contains a truncated death domain". Curr Biol. 7 (12): 1003–6. doi:10.1016/S0960-9822(06)00422-2. PMID 9382840.
  4. ^ Pan G, Ni J, Yu G, Wei YF, Dixit VM (Apr 1998). "TRUNDD, a new member of the TRAIL receptor family that antagonizes TRAIL signalling". FEBS Lett. 424 (1–2): 41–5. doi:10.1016/S0014-5793(98)00135-5. PMID 9537512.
  5. ^ "Entrez Gene: TNFRSF10D tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily, member 10d, decoy with truncated death domain".

Further reading

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

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