parvalbumin
0 sources
parvalbumin
Summary
parvalbumin is a protein[1]. parvalbumin draws 49 Wikipedia views per month (protein category, ranking #113 of 987).[2]
Key Facts
- parvalbumin's image is recorded as Human alpha parvalbumin.png[3].
- parvalbumin's instance of is recorded as protein[4].
- parvalbumin's UniProt protein ID is recorded as P20472[5].
- parvalbumin's part of is recorded as parvalbumin[6].
- parvalbumin's part of is recorded as EF-hand domain pair[7].
- parvalbumin's part of is recorded as EF-hand domain, protein family[8].
- parvalbumin's part of is recorded as EF-Hand 1, calcium-binding site, protein family[9].
- parvalbumin's Commons category is recorded as Parvalbumin[10].
- parvalbumin's OMIM ID is recorded as 168890[11].
- parvalbumin's has part is recorded as carbon[12].
- parvalbumin's has part is recorded as EF-hand domain[13].
- parvalbumin's has part is recorded as EF-hand 1, calcium-binding site[14].
- parvalbumin's RefSeq protein ID is recorded as NP_001302461[15].
- parvalbumin's RefSeq protein ID is recorded as NP_002845[16].
- parvalbumin's PDB structure ID is recorded as 1RJV[17].
- parvalbumin's PDB structure ID is recorded as 1RK9[18].
- parvalbumin's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02phdn0[19].
- parvalbumin's molecular function is recorded as calcium ion binding[20].
- parvalbumin's molecular function is recorded as protein homodimerization activity[21].
- parvalbumin's molecular function is recorded as metal ion binding[22].
- parvalbumin's molecular function is recorded as protein heterodimerization activity[23].
- parvalbumin's molecular function is recorded as calcium ion binding[24].
- parvalbumin's cell component is recorded as cytoplasm[25].
- parvalbumin's cell component is recorded as axon[26].
- parvalbumin's cell component is recorded as soma[27].
Why It Matters
parvalbumin draws 49 Wikipedia views per month (protein category, ranking #113 of 987).[2] parvalbumin has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] parvalbumin is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]