Dystrophin
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Dystrophin
Summary
Dystrophin is a protein[1]. Dystrophin ranks in the top 9% of protein entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (108 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Dystrophin's instance of is recorded as protein[3].
- Dystrophin's UniProt protein ID is recorded as P11532[4].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as CH domain superfamily[5].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as WW domain superfamily[6].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as EF-hand domain pair[7].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as auxiliary protein involved in transmembrane transport[8].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as Zinc finger, ZZ-type, protein family[9].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as EF-hand domain, type 2, protein family[10].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as EF-hand domain, type 1, protein family[11].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as Calponin homology domain, protein family[12].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as WW domain, protein family[13].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as Actinin-type actin-binding domain, conserved site, protein family[14].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as Spectrin repeat, protein family[15].
- Dystrophin's part of is recorded as Spectrin/alpha-actinin, protein family[16].
- Dystrophin's Commons category is recorded as Dystrophin[17].
- Dystrophin's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D016189[18].
- Dystrophin's has part is recorded as Spectrin/alpha-actinin[19].
- Dystrophin's has part is recorded as WW domain[20].
- Dystrophin's has part is recorded as Spectrin repeat[21].
- Dystrophin's has part is recorded as Zinc finger, ZZ-type[22].
- Dystrophin's has part is recorded as EF-hand domain, type 1[23].
- Dystrophin's has part is recorded as EF-hand domain, type 2[24].
- Dystrophin's has part is recorded as Calponin homology domain[25].
- Dystrophin's has part is recorded as Actinin-type actin-binding domain, conserved site[26].
- Dystrophin's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1987-00-00T00:00:00Z[27].
Why It Matters
Dystrophin ranks in the top 9% of protein entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (108 views/month).[2] Dystrophin has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Dystrophin is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]