SACS
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SACS
Summary
SACS is a gene[1]. SACS ranks in the top 2% of gene entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- SACS's instance of is recorded as gene[3].
- SACS is a type of protein-coding gene[4].
- SACS's HomoloGene ID is recorded as 8653[5].
- SACS's genomic start is recorded as 23902965[6].
- SACS's genomic start is recorded as 23288689[7].
- SACS's genomic end is recorded as 24007841[8].
- SACS's genomic end is recorded as 23433763[9].
- SACS's ortholog is recorded as Sacs[10].
- SACS's ortholog is recorded as sacs[11].
- SACS's ortholog is recorded as Sacs[12].
- SACS's encodes is recorded as Sacsin molecular chaperone[13].
- SACS's found in taxon is recorded as Homo sapiens[14].
- SACS's chromosome is recorded as human chromosome 13[15].
- SACS's genetic association is recorded as Charlevoix-Saguenay spastic ataxia[16].
- SACS's strand orientation is recorded as reverse strand[17].
- SACS's exact match is recorded as http://identifiers.org/ncbigene/26278[18].
- SACS's cytogenetic location is recorded as 13q12.12[19].
- SACS's expressed in is recorded as Brodmann area 23[20].
- SACS's expressed in is recorded as middle frontal gyrus[21].
- SACS's expressed in is recorded as frontal pole[22].
- SACS's expressed in is recorded as Brodmann area 10[23].
- SACS's expressed in is recorded as thoracic diaphragm[24].
- SACS's expressed in is recorded as Skeletal muscle tissue of rectus abdominis[25].
- SACS's expressed in is recorded as lateral nuclear group of thalamus[26].
- SACS's expressed in is recorded as middle temporal gyrus[27].
Why It Matters
SACS ranks in the top 2% of gene entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month).[2] SACS is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]