blood albumin
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blood albumin
Summary
blood albumin is a gene[1]. It ranks in the top 0.26% of gene entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (748 views/month, #14 of 5,469).[2]
Key Facts
- blood albumin's instance of is recorded as gene[3].
- blood albumin is a type of protein-coding gene[4].
- blood albumin's Commons category is recorded as Albumins[5].
- blood albumin's HomoloGene ID is recorded as 405[6].
- blood albumin's genomic start is recorded as 73397114[7].
- blood albumin's genomic start is recorded as 74262831[8].
- blood albumin's genomic end is recorded as 74287129[9].
- blood albumin's genomic end is recorded as 73421482[10].
- blood albumin's ortholog is recorded as Alb[11].
- blood albumin's ortholog is recorded as Alb[12].
- blood albumin's encodes is recorded as human serum albumin[13].
- blood albumin's encodes is recorded as Albumin, isoform CRA_k[14].
- blood albumin's found in taxon is recorded as Homo sapiens[15].
- blood albumin's chromosome is recorded as human chromosome 4[16].
- blood albumin's genetic association is recorded as Analbuminaemia[17].
- blood albumin's strand orientation is recorded as forward strand[18].
- blood albumin's exact match is recorded as http://identifiers.org/ncbigene/213[19].
- blood albumin's cytogenetic location is recorded as 4q13.3[20].
- blood albumin's expressed in is recorded as liver[21].
- blood albumin's expressed in is recorded as right lobe of liver[22].
- blood albumin's expressed in is recorded as body of pancreas[23].
- blood albumin's expressed in is recorded as kidney tubule[24].
- blood albumin's expressed in is recorded as islet of Langerhans[25].
- blood albumin's expressed in is recorded as human kidney[26].
- blood albumin's expressed in is recorded as epithelium of colon[27].
Why It Matters
blood albumin ranks in the top 0.26% of gene entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (748 views/month, #14 of 5,469).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]