Gene
dnajc28
- ID
- ZDB-GENE-050417-130
- Name
- DnaJ (Hsp40) homolog, subfamily C, member 28
- Symbol
- dnajc28 Nomenclature History
- Previous Names
-
- zgc:112068 (1)
- Type
- protein_coding_gene
- Location
- Chr: 9 Mapping Details/Browsers
- Description
- Orthologous to human DNAJC28 (DnaJ heat shock protein family (Hsp40) member C28).
- Genome Resources
- Note
- None
- Comparative Information
-
- All Expression Data
- 1 figure from Thisse et al., 2004
- Cross-Species Comparison
- High Throughput Data
- Thisse Expression Data
-
- MGC:112068 (1 image)
Wild Type Expression Summary
- All Phenotype Data
- No data available
- Cross-Species Comparison
- Alliance
Phenotype Summary
Mutations
Human Disease
Domain, Family, and Site Summary
Domain Details Per Protein
Protein | Additional Resources | Length | Chaperone J-domain superfamily | DnaJ domain | DnaJ homolog subfamily C member 28 | DnaJ homologue, subfamily C, member 28, conserved domain |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UniProtKB:Q567G4 | InterPro | 376 |
1 - 1 of 1
- Genome Browsers
Type | Name | Annotation Method | Has Havana Data | Length (nt) | Analysis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
mRNA |
dnajc28-201
(1)
|
Ensembl | 1,375 nt |
1 - 1 of 1
Interactions and Pathways
No data available
Plasmids
No data available
- Vacca, F., Gomes, A.S., Murashita, K., Cinquetti, R., Roseti, C., Barca, A., Rønnestad, I., Verri, T., Bossi, E. (2022) Functional characterization of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) PepT2 transporters. The Journal of physiology. 600(10):2377-2400
- Schebesta, M., and Serluca, F.C. (2009) olig1 expression identifies developing oligodendrocytes in zebrafish and requires hedgehog and notch signaling. Developmental Dynamics : an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists. 238(4):887-898
- Strausberg,R.L., Feingold,E.A., Grouse,L.H., Derge,J.G., Klausner,R.D., Collins,F.S., Wagner,L., Shenmen,C.M., Schuler,G.D., Altschul,S.F., Zeeberg,B., Buetow,K.H., Schaefer,C.F., Bhat,N.K., Hopkins,R.F., Jordan,H., Moore,T., Max,S.I., Wang,J., Hsieh,F., Diatchenko,L., Marusina,K., Farmer,A.A., Rubin,G.M., Hong,L., Stapleton,M., Soares,M.B., Bonaldo,M.F., Casavant,T.L., Scheetz,T.E., Brownstein,M.J., Usdin,T.B., Toshiyuki,S., Carninci,P., Prange,C., Raha,S.S., Loquellano,N.A., Peters,G.J., Abramson,R.D., Mullahy,S.J., Bosak,S.A., McEwan,P.J., McKernan,K.J., Malek,J.A., Gunaratne,P.H., Richards,S., Worley,K.C., Hale,S., Garcia,A.M., Gay,L.J., Hulyk,S.W., Villalon,D.K., Muzny,D.M., Sodergren,E.J., Lu,X., Gibbs,R.A., Fahey,J., Helton,E., Ketteman,M., Madan,A., Rodrigues,S., Sanchez,A., Whiting,M., Madan,A., Young,A.C., Shevchenko,Y., Bouffard,G.G., Blakesley,R.W., Touchman,J.W., Green,E.D., Dickson,M.C., Rodriguez,A.C., Grimwood,J., Schmutz,J., Myers,R.M., Butterfield,Y.S., Krzywinski,M.I., Skalska,U., Smailus,D.E., Schnerch,A., Schein,J.E., Jones,S.J., and Marra,M.A. (2002) Generation and initial analysis of more than 15,000 full-length human and mouse cDNA sequences. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 99(26):16899-903
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