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G protein-coupled receptor 141
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| Identifiers | ||
| Symbol(s) | GPR141; PGR13 | |
| External IDs | OMIM: 609045 MGI: 2672983 HomoloGene: 18771 | |
| RNA expression pattern | ||
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| Orthologs | ||
| Human | Mouse | |
| Entrez | 353345 | 353346 |
| Ensembl | ENSG00000187037 | ENSMUSG00000053101 |
| Uniprot | Q7Z602 | Q059N8 |
| Refseq | NM_181791 (mRNA) NP_861456 (protein) |
NM_181754 (mRNA) NP_861419 (protein) |
| Location | Chr 7: 37.75 - 37.75 Mb | Chr 13: 19.76 - 19.83 Mb |
| Pubmed search | [1] | [2] |
G protein-coupled receptor 141, also known as GPR141, is a human gene. The Human Genome Organisation (HUGO is an organization involved in the Human Genome Project, a project about mapping the human genome The Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI website is run by The Jackson Laboratory. HomoloGene, a tool of the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI is a system for automated detection of homologs (similarity attributable to descent The Entrez Global Query Cross-Database Search System is a powerful Federated search engine or Web portal that allows users to search many discrete Health sciences Ensembl is a joint scientific project between the European Bioinformatics Institute and the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, which was launched in 1999 in response to the imminent UniProt is the uni versal prot ein resource a central repository of Protein data created by combining Swiss-Prot, TrEMBL PubMed is a free search engine for accessing the MEDLINE database of citations and abstracts of biomedical research articles History See also History of genetics The existence of genes was first suggested by Gregor Mendel (1822-1884 who in the 1860s studied inheritance [1]
GPR141 is a member of the rhodopsin family of G protein-coupled receptors (GPRs) (Fredriksson et al. , 2003). [supplied by OMIM][1]