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EEF1A1 - eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1 alpha 1 (domestic cattle)

Gene
Symbol
Dates
  • Create:
    2016-09-14
  • Modify:
    2025-01-29

1 Names and Identifiers

1.1 Synonyms

  • EF-1-alpha-1
  • EF-Tu
  • eEF1A-1
  • elongation factor 1-alpha 1
  • elongation factor Tu
  • eukaryotic elongation factor 1 A-1

1.1.1 MeSH Entry Terms

  • EF-Tu
  • Elongation Factor Tu
  • Eucaryotic Elongation Factor Tu
  • Protein Synthesis Elongation Factor Tu
  • eEF-Tu

1.2 Other Identifiers

1.2.1 Ensembl ID

1.2.2 Bgee Gene ID

1.2.3 Enzyme Commission (EC) Number

1.2.4 GlyCosmos Gene

1.2.5 VEuPathDB ID

3 Proteins

3.1 Protein Function

Translation elongation factor that catalyzes the GTP-dependent binding of aminoacyl-tRNA (aa-tRNA) to the A-site of ribosomes during the elongation phase of protein synthesis. Base pairing between the mRNA codon and the aa-tRNA anticodon promotes GTP hydrolysis, releasing the aa-tRNA from EEF1A1 and allowing its accommodation into the ribosome. The growing protein chain is subsequently transferred from the P-site peptidyl tRNA to the A-site aa-tRNA, extending it by one amino acid through ribosome-catalyzed peptide bond formation. Also plays a role in the positive regulation of IFNG transcription in T-helper 1 cells as part of an IFNG promoter-binding complex with TXK and PARP1.

3.2 Protein Targets

4 Interactions and Pathways

4.1 Interactions

4.2 Pathways

5 Biochemical Reactions

6 Expression

7 Literature

7.1 Consolidated References

7.2 NLM Curated PubMed Citations

7.3 Gene-Chemical Co-Occurrences in Literature

7.4 Gene-Gene Co-Occurrences in Literature

7.5 Gene-Disease Co-Occurrences in Literature

8 Patents

8.1 Gene-Chemical Co-Occurrences in Patents

8.2 Gene-Gene Co-Occurrences in Patents

8.3 Gene-Disease Co-Occurrences in Patents

9 Classification

9.1 MeSH Tree

10 Information Sources

  1. NCBI Gene
    LICENSE
    NCBI Website and Data Usage Policies and Disclaimers
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/home/about/policies/
  2. PubChem
  3. Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
    LICENSE
    Works produced by the U.S. government are not subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any such works found on National Library of Medicine (NLM) Web sites may be freely used or reproduced without permission in the U.S.
    https://www.nlm.nih.gov/copyright.html
  4. BioGRID
    LICENSE
    The MIT License (MIT); Copyright Mike Tyers Lab
    https://wiki.thebiogrid.org/doku.php/terms_and_conditions
  5. GlyCosmos Glycoscience Portal
    LICENSE
    All copyrightable parts of the datasets in GlyCosmos are under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) License.
    https://glycosmos.org/license
  6. NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO)
  7. Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics Bgee
    LICENSE
    Creative Commons Zero license (CC0)
    https://www.bgee.org/about/
  8. UniProt
    LICENSE
    We have chosen to apply the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License to all copyrightable parts of our databases.
    https://www.uniprot.org/help/license
  9. VEuPathDB: The Eukaryotic Pathogen, Vector and Host Informatics Resource
    LICENSE
    All data on VEuPathDB websites are provided freely for public use.
    https://veupathdb.org/veupathdb/app/static-content/about.html
  10. Rhea - annotated reactions database
    LICENSE
    Rhea has chosen to apply the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). This means that you are free to copy, distribute, display and make commercial use of the database in all legislations, provided you credit (cite) Rhea.
    https://www.rhea-db.org/help/license-disclaimer
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