Difference between revisions of "YJL093C"
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− | '''Description of YJL093C:''' Outward-rectifier potassium channel of the plasma membrane with two pore domains in tandem, each of which forms a functional channel permeable to potassium; carboxy tail functions to prevent inner gate closures; target of K1 toxin<ref name=' | + | '''Description of YJL093C:''' Outward-rectifier potassium channel of the plasma membrane with two pore domains in tandem, each of which forms a functional channel permeable to potassium; carboxy tail functions to prevent inner gate closures; target of K1 toxin<ref name='S000039976'>Ahmed A, et al. (1999) A molecular target for viral killer toxin: TOK1 potassium channels. Cell 99(3):283-91 {{SGDpaper|S000039976}} PMID 10555144</ref><ref name='S000055368'>Ketchum KA, et al. (1995) A new family of outwardly rectifying potassium channel proteins with two pore domains in tandem. Nature 376(6542):690-5 {{SGDpaper|S000055368}} PMID 7651518</ref><ref name='S000069186'>Saldana C, et al. (2002) Splitting the two pore domains from TOK1 results in two cationic channels with novel functional properties. J Biol Chem 277(7):4797-805 {{SGDpaper|S000069186}} PMID 11714706</ref><ref name='S000069582'>Loukin SH and Saimi Y (2002) Carboxyl tail prevents yeast K(+) channel closure: proposal of an integrated model of TOK1 gating. Biophys J 82(2):781-92 |
− | {{SGDpaper| | + | {{SGDpaper|S000069582}} PMID 11806920</ref> |
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Revision as of 13:05, 31 March 2009
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Systematic name | YJL093C |
Gene name | TOK1 |
Aliases | DUK1, YKC1, YORK, YPK1 |
Feature type | ORF, Verified |
Coordinates | Chr X:256806..254731 |
Primary SGDID | S000003629 |
Description of YJL093C: Outward-rectifier potassium channel of the plasma membrane with two pore domains in tandem, each of which forms a functional channel permeable to potassium; carboxy tail functions to prevent inner gate closures; target of K1 toxin[1][2][3][4]
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References
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- ↑ Ahmed A, et al. (1999) A molecular target for viral killer toxin: TOK1 potassium channels. Cell 99(3):283-91 SGD PMID 10555144
- ↑ Ketchum KA, et al. (1995) A new family of outwardly rectifying potassium channel proteins with two pore domains in tandem. Nature 376(6542):690-5 SGD PMID 7651518
- ↑ Saldana C, et al. (2002) Splitting the two pore domains from TOK1 results in two cationic channels with novel functional properties. J Biol Chem 277(7):4797-805 SGD PMID 11714706
- ↑ Loukin SH and Saimi Y (2002) Carboxyl tail prevents yeast K(+) channel closure: proposal of an integrated model of TOK1 gating. Biophys J 82(2):781-92 SGD PMID 11806920
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