BAIT
LMO1
RBTN1, RHOM1, TTG1
LIM domain only 1 (rhombotin 1)
GO Process (1)
GO Function (0)
GO Component (1)
Gene Ontology Biological Process
Homo sapiens
PREY
BCL11A
BCL11A-L, BCL11A-S, BCL11A-XL, BCL11a-M, CTIP1, EVI9, HBFQTL5, ZNF856
B-cell CLL/lymphoma 11A (zinc finger protein)
GO Process (11)
GO Function (4)
GO Component (3)
Gene Ontology Biological Process
- negative regulation of axon extension [ISS]
- negative regulation of collateral sprouting [IMP]
- negative regulation of dendrite development [IMP]
- negative regulation of neuron projection development [IDA]
- negative regulation of protein homooligomerization [IC]
- negative regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter [IDA]
- positive regulation of collateral sprouting [IMP]
- positive regulation of neuron projection development [IDA]
- positive regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter [ISS]
- protein sumoylation [ISS]
- regulation of dendrite development [IMP]
Gene Ontology Molecular Function- RNA polymerase II core promoter proximal region sequence-specific DNA binding [IDA]
- RNA polymerase II core promoter proximal region sequence-specific DNA binding transcription factor activity involved in negative regulation of transcription [IDA]
- protein heterodimerization activity [IPI]
- protein homodimerization activity [TAS]
- RNA polymerase II core promoter proximal region sequence-specific DNA binding [IDA]
- RNA polymerase II core promoter proximal region sequence-specific DNA binding transcription factor activity involved in negative regulation of transcription [IDA]
- protein heterodimerization activity [IPI]
- protein homodimerization activity [TAS]
Homo sapiens
Two-hybrid
Bait protein expressed as a DNA binding domain (DBD) fusion and prey expressed as a transcriptional activation domain (TAD) fusion and interaction measured by reporter gene activation.
Publication
A proteome-scale map of the human interactome network.
Just as reference genome sequences revolutionized human genetics, reference maps of interactome networks will be critical to fully understand genotype-phenotype relationships. Here, we describe a systematic map of ?14,000 high-quality human binary protein-protein interactions. At equal quality, this map is ?30% larger than what is available from small-scale studies published in the literature in the last few decades. While currently ... [more]
Cell Nov. 20, 2014; 159(5);1212-26 [Pubmed: 25416956]
Throughput
- High Throughput
Curated By
- BioGRID