Oryctolagus cuniculus      TK      Eph

※ Eph family introduction

    Eph receptor tyrosine kinases are known able to bind their ephrin ligands and act as key regulator of cell contact-dependent signaling and patterning. Eph kinase contains fourteen members which can further be classified into two subclasses A and B in human. EphA1-8 and Eph10 belong to subclass A, EphB1-4 and EphB6 belong to subclass B. Eph kinases consist of two regions: intracellular region and extracellular region. The extracellular part contains a globular ligand-binding domain, a cysteine-rich region and two fibronectin type III repeats. The intracellular part contains a short juxtamembrane region, a kinase catalytic domain, a sterile α motif (SAM) protein−protein interaction domain and a PDZ-binding motif. Eph/ephrin binding will lead to very diverse biological readouts including adhesion versus repulsion and increased versus decreased motility. Depending on the different cell type and context, the interaction will lead to different downstream signaling pathway. In addition, evidence shows that endocytosis of Eph/ephrin and associated tissue-specific effectors are essential for diverse biological roles and processes (1).

Reference
1. Pitulescu, M.E. and Adams, R.H. (2010) Eph/ephrin molecules--a hub for signaling and endocytosis. Genes Dev, 24, 2480-2492. PMID: 21078817


There are 13 genes.  Reviewed (0 or Unreviewed (13

No.StatusEKPD IDGene IDGene Name
1
EKS-ORC-00001
ENSOCUG00000006723
EPHA4
2
EKS-ORC-00013
ENSOCUG00000007545
EPHB6
3
EKS-ORC-00005
ENSOCUG00000017595
EPHA5
4
EKS-ORC-00002
ENSOCUG00000010465
EPHA3
5
EKS-ORC-00004
ENSOCUG00000013540
EPHB2
6
EKS-ORC-00008
ENSOCUG00000016902
EPHB4
7
EKS-ORC-00011
ENSOCUG00000011082
EPHA1
8
EKS-ORC-00003
ENSOCUG00000000672
EPHA7
9
EKS-ORC-00009
ENSOCUG00000000786
EPHA2
10
EKS-ORC-00006
ENSOCUG00000003812
EPHB1
11
EKS-ORC-00007
ENSOCUG00000012637
EPHB3
12
EKS-ORC-00010
ENSOCUG00000015119
EPHA8
13
EKS-ORC-00012
ENSOCUG00000025671
EPHA10