Also known as CD200 molecule, MOX1, MOX2, MRC, OX-2, CD-200
OX-2 membrane glycoprotein, also named CD200 (Cluster of Differentiation 200) is a human protein encoded by the gene. In humans, the CD200 gene is located on chromosome 3 in proximity to genes encoding the other B7 proteins CD80/CD86. In mice, the CD200 gene is located on chromosome 16.
This gene encodes a type I membrane glycoprotein containing two extracellular immunoglobulin domains, a transmembrane and a cytoplasmic domain. This gene is expressed by various cell types, including B cells, a subset of T cells, thymocytes, endothelial cells, and neurons. The encoded protein plays an important role in immunosuppression and regulation of anti-tumor activity. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms. [provided by RefSeq, Jan 2016].
via MyGene.info
OX-2 membrane glycoprotein, also named CD200 (Cluster of Differentiation 200) is a human protein encoded by the gene. In humans, the CD200 gene is located on chromosome 3 in proximity to genes encoding the other B7 proteins CD80/CD86. In mice, the CD200 gene is located on chromosome 16.
The protein encoded by this gene is a type-1 membrane glycoprotein, which contains two IgSF immunoglobulin domains, transmembrane region and a 19 amino acid long cytoplasmatic domain. CD 200 belongs to the immunoglobulin superfamily, particularly belongs to the B7 receptor family.
via Wikidata · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).