This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.
- Table of Contents
10 Q&As
1 Citations 16 Q&As
1 Citations 4 Q&As
Facts about Tyrosine-protein kinase Mer.
Following activation by ligand, interacts with GRB2 or PLCG2 and causes phosphorylation of MAPK1, MAPK2, FAK/PTK2 or RAC1. MERTK signaling plays a role in various processes such as macrophage clearance of apoptotic cells, platelet aggregation, cytoskeleton reorganization and engulfment.
Human | |
---|---|
Gene Name: | MERTK |
Uniprot: | Q12866 |
Entrez: | 10461 |
Belongs to: |
---|
protein kinase superfamily |
c-Eyk; c-mer proto-oncogene tyrosine kinase; C-mer; EC 2.7.10; EC 2.7.10.1; MER receptor tyrosine kinase; Mer; MerTK; MGC133349; Receptor tyrosine kinase MerTK; RP38Proto-oncogene c-Mer; STK kinase; tyrosine-protein kinase Mer
Mass (kDA):
110.249 kDA
Human | |
---|---|
Location: | 2q13 |
Sequence: | 2; NC_000002.12 (111898607..112029561) |
Not expressed in normal B- and T-lymphocytes but is expressed in numerous neoplastic B- and T-cell lines. Highly expressed in testis, ovary, prostate, lung, and kidney, with lower expression in spleen, small intestine, colon, and liver.
Membrane; Single-pass type I membrane protein.
PMID: 8086340 by Graham D.K., et al. Cloning and mRNA expression analysis of a novel human protooncogene, c-mer.
PMID: 11062461 by Gal A., et al. Mutations in MERTK, the human orthologue of the RCS rat retinal dystrophy gene, cause retinitis pigmentosa.
*More publications can be found for each product on its corresponding product page