Cbl is an adaptor protein that binds EGF receptors (or other tyrosine kinases) and SH3 domains, functioning as a negative regulator of many signaling pathways. The N-terminal domain is evolutionarily conserved, and is known to bind to phosphorylated ...
Cbl is an adaptor protein that binds EGF receptors (or other tyrosine kinases) and SH3 domains, functioning as a negative regulator of many signaling pathways. The N-terminal domain is evolutionarily conserved, and is known to bind to phosphorylated tyrosine residues. Cbl_N is comprised of 3 structural domains of which this is the first - a four helix bundle.
Cbl is an adaptor protein that binds EGF receptors (or other tyrosine kinases) and SH3 domains, functioning as a negative regulator of many signaling pathways. The N-terminal domain is evolutionarily conserved, and is known to bind to phosphorylated ...
Cbl is an adaptor protein that binds EGF receptors (or other tyrosine kinases) and SH3 domains, functioning as a negative regulator of many signaling pathways. The N-terminal domain is evolutionarily conserved, and is known to bind to phosphorylated tyrosine residues. The so called N-terminal domain is actually 3 structural domains, of which this is the C-terminal SH2 domain.
CBL proto-oncogene N-terminus, EF hand-like domain
Cbl is an adaptor protein that binds EGF receptors (or other tyrosine kinases) and SH3 domains, functioning as a negative regulator of many signaling pathways. The N-terminal domain is evolutionarily conserved, and is known to bind to phosphorylated ...
Cbl is an adaptor protein that binds EGF receptors (or other tyrosine kinases) and SH3 domains, functioning as a negative regulator of many signaling pathways. The N-terminal domain is evolutionarily conserved, and is known to bind to phosphorylated tyrosine residues. The so called N-terminal domain is actually 3 structural domains, of which this is the central EF hand domain.
Protein phosphorylation, which plays a key role in most cellular activities, is a reversible process mediated by protein kinases and phosphoprotein phosphatases. Protein kinases catalyse the transfer of the gamma phosphate from nucleotide triphosph ...
Protein phosphorylation, which plays a key role in most cellular activities, is a reversible process mediated by protein kinases and phosphoprotein phosphatases. Protein kinases catalyse the transfer of the gamma phosphate from nucleotide triphosphates (often ATP) to one or more amino acid residues in a protein substrate side chain, resulting in a conformational change affecting protein function. Phosphoprotein phosphatases catalyse the reverse process. Protein kinases fall into three broad classes, characterised with respect to substrate specificity [1]; Serine/threonine-protein kinases, tyrosine-protein kinases, and dual specificity protein kinases (e.g. MEK - phosphorylates both Thr and Tyr on target proteins). This entry represents the catalytic domain found in a number of serine/threonine- and tyrosine-protein kinases. It does not include the catalytic domain of dual specificity kinases.