Also known as CD150, CDw150, SLAM, signaling lymphocytic activation molecule family member 1
Signaling lymphocytic activation molecule 1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the SLAMF1 gene. Recently SLAMF1 has also been designated CD150 (cluster of differentiation 150).
Enables SH2 domain binding activity and identical protein binding activity. Involved in several processes, including negative regulation of CD40 signaling pathway; negative regulation of cytokine production; and positive regulation of MAPK cascade. Located in extracellular exosome. [provided by Alliance of Genome Resources, Apr 2022]
via MyGene.info
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Signaling lymphocytic activation molecule 1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the SLAMF1 gene. Recently SLAMF1 has also been designated CD150 (cluster of differentiation 150).
SLAMF1 belongs to the signaling lymphocytic activation molecule family. As other receptors from this family, SLAMF1 is expressed in different types of hematopoietic cells and it plays a role in the regulation of the immune system.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).