+ |
CACNA1A | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-266708 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
20655485 |
The main G b/g-dependent effectors of presynaptic GABAB receptors are P/Q-and N-type voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. GABAB receptors inhibit these Ca2+ channels at excitatory and inhibitory terminals, thereby restricting neurotransmitter release. |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264323 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30849329 |
Voltage-gated calcium channels mediate the influx of calcium in response to membrane depolarization in excitable cells. In presynaptic nerve terminals, this calcium influx triggers transmitter release for synaptic transmission. Several neurological and cardiac disorders are caused by pathogenic variants in genes encoding α1-subunits of voltage-gated calcium channels, including CACNA1A (MIM: 601011) (familial hemiplegic migraine [MIM: 141500], episodic ataxia [MIM: 108500], and epilepsy [MIM: 617106]),3, 4, 5 CACNA1C (MIM: 114205) (Timothy syndrome [MIM: 601005]),6, 7 CACNA1D (MIM: 114206) (primary aldosteronism, neurodevelopmental disorders [MIM: 615474]),8, 9 and CACNA1G (MIM: 604065) (spinocerebellar ataxia [MIM: 616795]). |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Axon guidance, Neurotransmitters release |
+ |
SLC24A5 | down-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264393 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30173760 |
K+-dependent Na+-Ca2+ Exchangers (NCKX) are bi-directional plasma membrane Ca2+ transporters which belong to the Solute Carrier Family 24 A (SLC24 A) of membrane transporters. NCKXs operate via the alternating access model and mediate the extrusion of one Ca2+ ion coupled with one K+ ion in exchange for four Na+ ions (4Na+↔ 1Ca2+ + 1 K+) |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH16 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265833 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH5 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265845 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CAPN1 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-251580 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Alzheimer Disease Specific Cell Type |
pmid |
sentence |
25969760 |
The data obtained from those studies suggest that the mechanisms leading to the formation of the hallmark lesions of AD might be linked. One of such mechanisms seems to be the dysregulation of calcium homeostasis that results in the abnormal activation of calpains. Calpains are a family of Ca2+-dependent cysteine proteases that play a key role in multiple cell functions including cell development, differentiation and proliferation, axonal guidance, growth cone motility, and cell death, among others. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
SLC25A12 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265152 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
12084073 |
Aralar1 and citrin are members of the subfamily of calcium-binding mitochondrial carriers and correspond to two isoforms of the mitochondrial aspartate/glutamate carrier (AGC). These proteins are activated by Ca2+ acting on the external side of the inner mitochondrial membrane. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
CACNA1C | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264325 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30849329 |
Voltage-gated calcium channels mediate the influx of calcium in response to membrane depolarization in excitable cells. In presynaptic nerve terminals, this calcium influx triggers transmitter release for synaptic transmission. Several neurological and cardiac disorders are caused by pathogenic variants in genes encoding α1-subunits of voltage-gated calcium channels, including CACNA1A (MIM: 601011) (familial hemiplegic migraine [MIM: 141500], episodic ataxia [MIM: 108500], and epilepsy [MIM: 617106]),3, 4, 5 CACNA1C (MIM: 114205) (Timothy syndrome [MIM: 601005]),6, 7 CACNA1D (MIM: 114206) (primary aldosteronism, neurodevelopmental disorders [MIM: 615474]),8, 9 and CACNA1G (MIM: 604065) (spinocerebellar ataxia [MIM: 616795]). |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | down-regulates activity
chemical inhibition
|
FLNA |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-261845 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Blood Platelet |
pmid |
sentence |
27871158 |
Gelsolin is an actin binding protein that severs and caps the barbed-end actin filaments to prevent actin monomer exchange upon intracellular calcium increase in the initial step. Cofilin also binds to actin and contributes to the disassembly of actin filaments and the subsequent release of actin monomers. The actin cross-linking complex, GP1b/IX-filamin, translocates from the plasma membrane to the cytoskeleton during this step. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
chemical activation
|
PRKCZ |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-76991 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
10777564 |
Wnt ligands working through frizzled receptors have a differential ability to stimulate release of intracellular calcium (ca(2+)) and activation of protein kinase c (pkc). |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH7 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265847 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
Cadherins |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265811 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Neurotransmitters release |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH3 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265843 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRIA4 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264950 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH2 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265842 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRIA3 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264949 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
CACNA1E | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264322 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30849329 |
CACNA1E is highly expressed in the central nervous system and encodes the α1-subunit of the voltage-gated CaV2.3 channel, which conducts high voltage-activated R-type calcium currents that initiate synaptic transmission. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
SLC24A1 | down-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264390 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30173760 |
K+-dependent Na+-Ca2+ Exchangers (NCKX) are bi-directional plasma membrane Ca2+ transporters which belong to the Solute Carrier Family 24 A (SLC24 A) of membrane transporters. NCKXs operate via the alternating access model and mediate the extrusion of one Ca2+ ion coupled with one K+ ion in exchange for four Na+ ions (4Na+↔ 1Ca2+ + 1 K+) |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
CACNA1G | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264324 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30849329 |
Voltage-gated calcium channels mediate the influx of calcium in response to membrane depolarization in excitable cells. In presynaptic nerve terminals, this calcium influx triggers transmitter release for synaptic transmission. Several neurological and cardiac disorders are caused by pathogenic variants in genes encoding α1-subunits of voltage-gated calcium channels, including CACNA1A (MIM: 601011) (familial hemiplegic migraine [MIM: 141500], episodic ataxia [MIM: 108500], and epilepsy [MIM: 617106]),3, 4, 5 CACNA1C (MIM: 114205) (Timothy syndrome [MIM: 601005]),6, 7 CACNA1D (MIM: 114206) (primary aldosteronism, neurodevelopmental disorders [MIM: 615474]),8, 9 and CACNA1G (MIM: 604065) (spinocerebellar ataxia [MIM: 616795]). |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264032 |
|
|
Mus musculus |
|
pmid |
sentence |
33393208 |
Adult hippocampal neurogenesis plays an important role in neuronal plasticity and maintenance in mammals. Low-threshold voltage-gated T-type calcium channels produce calcium spikes that increase fast action potentials in newborn cells in the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens, Mus Musculus |
+ |
MCU_MICU2_variant | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-270878 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
32315830 |
MCU is a Ca2+-selective channel that mediates mitochondrial Ca2+ influx. The human channel contains tetrameric pore-forming MCU, regulatory subunits MICU1/2, and EMRE that is required both for channel function and MICU1/2-mediated Ca2+ regulation. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
KCNMA1 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-269192 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Neuron |
pmid |
sentence |
31152168 |
The large-conductance Ca2+- and voltage-activated K+ (BK) channel is a tetramer consisting of four α-subunits encoded by the KCNMA1 gene on chromosome 10q22.3. The BK channel can be allosterically activated by both changes in the membrane voltage (voltage-dependent activation pathway) and intracellular [Ca2+] concentration (calcium-dependent activation pathway) |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-269199 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Neuron |
pmid |
sentence |
31152168 |
The large-conductance Ca2+- and voltage-activated K+ (BK) channel is a tetramer consisting of four α-subunits encoded by the KCNMA1 gene on chromosome 10q22.3. The BK channel can be allosterically activated by both changes in the membrane voltage (voltage-dependent activation pathway) and intracellular [Ca2+] concentration (calcium-dependent activation pathway) |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRM2 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264933 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
ATP2A2 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-262050 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
16402920 |
In the present study, we have analysed the expression and functional characteristics of SERCA2c relative to SERCA2a and SERCA2b isoforms upon their stable heterologous expression in HEK-293 cells (human embryonic kidney 293 cells). All SERCA2 proteins induced an increased Ca2+ content in the ER of intact transfected cells. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CIB2 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-269667 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
35408910 |
Calcium- and integrin-binding protein 2 (CIB2) is a small EF-hand protein capable of binding Mg2+ and Ca2+ ions. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
chemical activation
|
PRKCA |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-198822 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22944199 |
The wnt/ca2+ signaling pathway is defined by the activation of plc (phospholipase c) through wnt/fzd resulting in an increase in intracellular ca2+ levels, which activate pkcs (protein kinase c) and camkii (calcium-calmodulin-dependent kinase ii) or cn (calcineurin), a phosphatase that activates the transcription factor nfat (nuclear factor of activated t cell). |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-58506 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
9651347 |
Our results indicate that ca2+ ions not only anchor the protein to membrane surfaces but also induce conformational changes resulting in pkc activation. |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Tissue: |
Muscle, Skeletal Muscle |
Pathways: | Axon guidance, B-cell activation, T cell activation, Thyroid Hormone Metabolism, VEGF Signaling |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH22 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265838 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
KCNN4 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-276856 |
|
|
Rattus norvegicus |
Microglia |
pmid |
sentence |
25274816 |
KCa3.1 activation is expected to maintain a negative membrane potential, which will increase Ca2+ influx through nonvoltage gated Ca2+-release-activated Ca2+ (CRAC) channels that are prevalent in rat microglia |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Rattus Norvegicus |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
chemical activation
|
CAMK2G |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-198816 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22944199 |
Non-canonical Wnt/Ca2+ pathway has also been implicated in multiple functions including cell adhesion and cell movements during gastrulation. In this signaling cascade, binding of Wnt to the Fzd receptor leads to the release of intracellular Ca2+, a process which is mediated through heterotrimeric G proteins, PLC (phospholipase C) and CamKII (calcium-calmodulin-dependent kinae II) as well as PKC (protein kinase C). The increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration also activates the calcineurin phosphatase, leading to activation of the transcription factor NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T cell). |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
CACNA1D | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264326 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30849329 |
Voltage-gated calcium channels mediate the influx of calcium in response to membrane depolarization in excitable cells. In presynaptic nerve terminals, this calcium influx triggers transmitter release for synaptic transmission. Several neurological and cardiac disorders are caused by pathogenic variants in genes encoding α1-subunits of voltage-gated calcium channels, including CACNA1A (MIM: 601011) (familial hemiplegic migraine [MIM: 141500], episodic ataxia [MIM: 108500], and epilepsy [MIM: 617106]),3, 4, 5 CACNA1C (MIM: 114205) (Timothy syndrome [MIM: 601005]),6, 7 CACNA1D (MIM: 114206) (primary aldosteronism, neurodevelopmental disorders [MIM: 615474]),8, 9 and CACNA1G (MIM: 604065) (spinocerebellar ataxia [MIM: 616795]). |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264359 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
28642685 |
Rab interacting molecules (RIMs) are multi-domain proteins that positively regulate the number of Ca2+ channels at the presynaptic active zone (AZ). Several molecular mechanisms have been demonstrated for RIM-binding to components of the presynaptic Ca2+ channel complex, the key signaling element at the AZ. Here, we report an interaction of the C2B domain of RIM2α and RIM3γ with the C-terminus of the pore-forming α–subunit of CaV1.3 channels (CaV1.3α1), which mediate stimulus-secretion coupling at the ribbon synapses of cochlear inner hair cells (IHCs). |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
Calprotectin complex |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-262826 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Phagocyte |
pmid |
sentence |
16690079 |
S100 proteins comprise the largest family of calcium-binding proteins. Members of this family usually form homo- or heterodimers, which may associate to higher-order oligomers in a calcium-dependent manner. The heterodimers of S100A8 and S100A9 represent the major calcium-binding proteins in phagocytes. Both proteins regulate migration of these cells via modulation of tubulin polymerization. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
chemical activation
|
CALM3 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-266333 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
10884684 |
Calmodulin is the best studied and prototypical example of the e-f-hand family of ca2+-sensing proteins. In the event of a transient rise in Ca2+, the Ca2+ ion is coordinated in each Ca2+-binding loop of Ca2+–CaM by seven, primarily carboxylate, ligands. The binding of Ca2+ leads to substantial alterations in the interhelical angles within the E–F hands in each domain and dramatically changes the two domains of CaM to produce more ‘open’ conformations |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-266334 |
|
|
Mus musculus |
|
pmid |
sentence |
10448861 |
Treatment with igf-1 or insulin and dexamethasone mobilizes intracellular calcium, activates the ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase calcineurin, and induces the nuclear translocation of the transcription factor nf-atc1. |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens, Mus Musculus |
+ |
GRIK5 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264946 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
S100A8 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-261935 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Phagocyte |
pmid |
sentence |
16690079 |
S100 proteins comprise the largest family of calcium-binding proteins. Members of this family usually form homo- or heterodimers, which may associate to higher-order oligomers in a calcium-dependent manner. The heterodimers of S100A8 and S100A9 represent the major calcium-binding proteins in phagocytes. Both proteins regulate migration of these cells via modulation of tubulin polymerization. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
MCU_MICU3_variant | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-270873 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
32315830 |
MCU is a Ca2+-selective channel that mediates mitochondrial Ca2+ influx. The human channel contains tetrameric pore-forming MCU, regulatory subunits MICU1/2, and EMRE that is required both for channel function and MICU1/2-mediated Ca2+ regulation. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
SLC24A2 | down-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264389 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30173760 |
K+-dependent Na+-Ca2+ Exchangers (NCKX) are bi-directional plasma membrane Ca2+ transporters which belong to the Solute Carrier Family 24 A (SLC24 A) of membrane transporters. NCKXs operate via the alternating access model and mediate the extrusion of one Ca2+ ion coupled with one K+ ion in exchange for four Na+ ions (4Na+↔ 1Ca2+ + 1 K+) |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
CACNA1B | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265069 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
20655485 |
The main G b/g-dependent effectors of presynaptic GABAB receptors are P/Q-and N-type voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. GABAB receptors inhibit these Ca2+ channels at excitatory and inhibitory terminals, thereby restricting neurotransmitter release. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | GABAergic synapse |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
chemical activation
|
CALM1 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-78915 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
10884684 |
Calmodulin is the best studied and prototypical example of the e-f-hand family of ca2+-sensing proteins. In the event of a transient rise in Ca2+, the Ca2+ ion is coordinated in each Ca2+-binding loop of Ca2+–CaM by seven, primarily carboxylate, ligands. The binding of Ca2+ leads to substantial alterations in the interhelical angles within the E–F hands in each domain and dramatically changes the two domains of CaM to produce more ‘open’ conformations |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-235590 |
|
|
Mus musculus |
|
pmid |
sentence |
10448861 |
Treatment with igf-1 or insulin and dexamethasone mobilizes intracellular calcium, activates the ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase calcineurin, and induces the nuclear translocation of the transcription factor nf-atc1. |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens, Mus Musculus |
Pathways: | B-cell activation, T cell activation, Thyroid Hormone Metabolism, VEGF Signaling |
+ |
KAR | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264940 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Glutamatergic synapse |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
relocalization
|
PLA2G4A |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-35874 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
8027085 |
Cytosolic phospholipase a2 (cpla2) is a calcium-sensitive 85-kda enzyme that hydrolyzes arachidonic acid-containing membrane phospholipids to initiate the biosynthesis of eicosanoids and platelet-activating factor, potent inflammatory mediators. The calcium-dependent activation of the enzyme is mediated by an n-terminal c2 domain, which is responsible for calcium-dependent translocation of the enzyme to membranes and that enables the intact enzyme to hydrolyze membrane-resident substrates. cytosolic phospholipase a2 (cpla2) associates with natural membranes in response to physiological increases in ca2+, resulting in the selective hydrolysis of arachidonyl phospholipids. |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-54943 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
9430701 |
Cytosolic phospholipase a2 (cpla2) is a calcium-sensitive 85-kda enzyme that hydrolyzes arachidonic acid-containing membrane phospholipids to initiate the biosynthesis of eicosanoids and platelet-activating factor, potent inflammatory mediators. The calcium-dependent activation of the enzyme is mediated by an n-terminal c2 domain, which is responsible for calcium-dependent translocation of the enzyme to membranes and that enables the intact enzyme to hydrolyze membrane-resident substrates. cytosolic phospholipase a2 (cpla2) associates with natural membranes in response to physiological increases in ca2+, resulting in the selective hydrolysis of arachidonyl phospholipids. |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
SLC8B1 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-275732 |
|
|
|
|
pmid |
sentence |
23056385 |
This study focuses on NCLX, the recently discovered mitochondrial Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger that is linked to Ca(2+) signalling in MIN6 and primary β cells. Suppression either of NCLX expression, using a siRNA construct (siNCLX) or of its activity, by a dominant negative construct (dnNCLX), enhanced mitochondrial Ca(2+) influx and blocked efflux induced by glucose or by cell depolarization. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
+ |
GRIK1 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264942 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
chemical activation
|
PPP3CA |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-198819 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22944199 |
Non-canonical Wnt/Ca2+ pathway has also been implicated in multiple functions including cell adhesion and cell movements during gastrulation. In this signaling cascade, binding of Wnt to the Fzd receptor leads to the release of intracellular Ca2+, a process which is mediated through heterotrimeric G proteins, PLC (phospholipase C) and CamKII (calcium-calmodulin-dependent kinae II) as well as PKC (protein kinase C). The increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration also activates the calcineurin phosphatase, leading to activation of the transcription factor NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T cell). |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-176367 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
21880741 |
Except for nfat5, nfatc1c4 are activated upon a rise in intracellular ca2+, which stimulates the serine/threonine phosphatase activity of calcineurin the ca2+-calcineurin signal is the most important signal for regulating nfat activation, but the signal that leads to ca2+ influx during neural tube differentiation is still unclear. |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | T cell activation |
+ |
NMDA receptor_2C | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264220 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30037851 |
NMDA-type glutamate receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that mediate a Ca2+-permeable component of excitatory neurotransmission in the central nervous system (CNS). |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
SLC25A13 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265153 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
12084073 |
Aralar1 and citrin are members of the subfamily of calcium-binding mitochondrial carriers and correspond to two isoforms of the mitochondrial aspartate/glutamate carrier (AGC). These proteins are activated by Ca2+ acting on the external side of the inner mitochondrial membrane. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
ATP2B2 | down-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-262585 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30535804 |
ATP2B2 encodes the PMCA2 Ca(2+) pump that plays an important role in maintaining ion homeostasis in hair cells among others by extrusion of Ca(2+) from the stereocilia to the endolymph. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRM3 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264934 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
GSN |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-261844 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Blood Platelet |
pmid |
sentence |
27871158 |
Gelsolin is an actin binding protein that severs and caps the barbed-end actin filaments to prevent actin monomer exchange upon intracellular calcium increase in the initial step. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRM7 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264938 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRIK4 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264945 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRIN2A | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-251578 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
20950656 |
In addition, neurons also possess unique systems for local Ca2+ signaling at synapses including; presynaptic voltage-gated Ca2+ channels coupled to the synaptic vesicle membrane fusion machinery [39]; postsynaptic excitatory glutamate receptor channels which flux either Na+ (AMPA receptors) or Ca2+ (NMDA receptors) [40] and [41]; and Ca2+-binding proteins |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
ATP2A1 | down-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265928 |
|
|
Oryctolagus cuniculus |
|
pmid |
sentence |
28487373 |
SERCA1, the sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase of skeletal muscle, is essential for muscle relaxation and maintenance of low resting Ca2+ levels in the myoplasm. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Oryctolagus Cuniculus |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH1 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265841 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
chemical activation
|
Calcineurin |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-252320 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22944199 |
Non-canonical Wnt/Ca2+ pathway has also been implicated in multiple functions including cell adhesion and cell movements during gastrulation. In this signaling cascade, binding of Wnt to the Fzd receptor leads to the release of intracellular Ca2+, a process which is mediated through heterotrimeric G proteins, PLC (phospholipase C) and CamKII (calcium-calmodulin-dependent kinae II) as well as PKC (protein kinase C). The increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration also activates the calcineurin phosphatase, leading to activation of the transcription factor NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T cell). |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Axon guidance, B-cell activation, Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, Oxytocin signaling, T cell activation |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
|
Excitatory_synaptic_transmission |
0.7 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264953 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Neuron |
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Dopaminergic Synapse, Glutamatergic synapse, GABAergic synapse , Oxytocin signaling |
+ |
NMDA receptor_2B | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264219 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30037851 |
NMDA-type glutamate receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that mediate a Ca2+-permeable component of excitatory neurotransmission in the central nervous system (CNS). |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH20 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265837 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRM6 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264937 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Neuron |
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
CACNA1H | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-269278 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30736831 |
Certain types of sensory neurons express Cav3.2 calcium channels [12, 13] These channels belong to the family of low-voltage gated T-type calcium channels |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Tissue: |
Brain |
+ |
SEC61 complex | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265284 |
|
|
|
|
pmid |
sentence |
33925740 |
The Sec61 complex in the ER membrane represents the major entry point for precursor polypeptides into the membrane or lumen of the ER and provides a conduit for Ca2+ ions from the ER lumen to the cytosol. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
+ |
ITPR1 | up-regulates quantity
chemical modification
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-256238 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
24646566 |
The key event in activation of fluid secretion is an increase in intracellular [ca2+] ([ca2+]i) triggered by ip3-induced release of ca2+ from er via the ip3r. ip3rs determine the site of initiation and the pattern of [ca2+]i signal in the cell. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Dopaminergic Synapse, Glutamatergic synapse, Neurotransmitters release, Oxytocin signaling, VEGF Signaling |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
chemical activation
|
CALM2 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-266317 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
10884684 |
Calmodulin is the best studied and prototypical example of the e-f-hand family of ca2+-sensing proteins. In the event of a transient rise in Ca2+, the Ca2+ ion is coordinated in each Ca2+-binding loop of Ca2+–CaM by seven, primarily carboxylate, ligands. The binding of Ca2+ leads to substantial alterations in the interhelical angles within the E–F hands in each domain and dramatically changes the two domains of CaM to produce more ‘open’ conformations |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-266318 |
|
|
Mus musculus |
|
pmid |
sentence |
10448861 |
Treatment with igf-1 or insulin and dexamethasone mobilizes intracellular calcium, activates the ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase calcineurin, and induces the nuclear translocation of the transcription factor nf-atc1. |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens, Mus Musculus |
+ |
GRM5 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264936 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRM4 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264935 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH18 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265835 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH11 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265829 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
Calcineurin |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-255462 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
21880741 |
Except for nfat5, nfatc1c4 are activated upon a rise in intracellular ca2+, which stimulates the serine/threonine phosphatase activity of calcineurin the ca2+-calcineurin signal is the most important signal for regulating nfat activation, but the signal that leads to ca2+ influx during neural tube differentiation is still unclear. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Axon guidance, B-cell activation, Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, Oxytocin signaling, T cell activation |
+ |
GRID1 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264951 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRIK2 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264943 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
TRPC6 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-253339 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
12032305 |
Members of the transient receptor potential channel (TRPC) family have been characterized as molecular substrates mediating receptor-activated cation influx |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
|
Synaptic_plasticity |
0.7 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264955 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Neuron |
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Dopaminergic Synapse, Glutamatergic synapse, GABAergic synapse , Oxytocin signaling |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH10 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265828 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH24 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265840 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH15 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265832 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
NMDA receptor_2D | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264221 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30037851 |
NMDA-type glutamate receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that mediate a Ca2+-permeable component of excitatory neurotransmission in the central nervous system (CNS). |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
NMDA receptor_2A | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264218 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30037851 |
NMDA-type glutamate receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that mediate a Ca2+-permeable component of excitatory neurotransmission in the central nervous system (CNS). |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRIK3 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264944 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRM8 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264939 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Neuron |
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
SYT1 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-263976 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
16679567 |
Because synaptotagmins bind SNAP-25 and Ca2+, SNAP-25 has also been linked to the Ca2+ dependence of exocytosis (42). One model suggests that synaptotagmin blocks full SNARE fusion pore formation by binding to t-SNAREs.This interaction prevents fusion from occurring in the absence of calcium. When Ca2+ is present, synaptotagmin releases the t-SNAREs so they can fully zipper with the v-SNARE, leading to fusion |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Neurotransmitters release |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH8 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265848 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH17 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265834 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH23 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265839 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CAMK2A |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-255491 |
|
|
|
|
pmid |
sentence |
15621017 |
It has been reported that Aβ can result in an increase in intracellular Ca2+, which in turn can activates CaMK. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Pathways: | Axon guidance, Glutamatergic synapse, Neurotransmitters release |
+ |
Hair cells mechanotransduction channel | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-262573 |
|
|
Mus musculus |
|
pmid |
sentence |
23217710 |
Despite this progress, it is not known which genes encode subunits of the mechanotransduction channel of hair cells. Ca2+ enters stereocilia upon mechanical stimulation near the lower tip-link insertion site, indicating that transduction channels are present in proximity to PCDH15 |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Mus Musculus |
+ |
MCU_MICU1_variant | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-270868 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
32315830 |
MCU is a Ca2+-selective channel that mediates mitochondrial Ca2+ influx. The human channel contains tetrameric pore-forming MCU, regulatory subunits MICU1/2, and EMRE that is required both for channel function and MICU1/2-mediated Ca2+ regulation. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
S100A9 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-261934 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Phagocyte |
pmid |
sentence |
16690079 |
S100 proteins comprise the largest family of calcium-binding proteins. Members of this family usually form homo- or heterodimers, which may associate to higher-order oligomers in a calcium-dependent manner. The heterodimers of S100A8 and S100A9 represent the major calcium-binding proteins in phagocytes. Both proteins regulate migration of these cells via modulation of tubulin polymerization. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
1,2-diacyl-sn-glycerol | up-regulates
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-179288 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
18593525 |
Dag and ip3 initiate further signal transduction pathways through activation of protein kinase c (pkc) and intracellular calcium release. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | B-cell activation, Oxytocin signaling, T cell activation, Thyroid Hormone Metabolism, VEGF Signaling |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH6 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265846 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
MCOLN1 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-255308 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
26000950 |
Induction of autophagy and lysosomal biogenesis via TFEB required MCOLN1-mediated calcineurin activation, linking lysosomal calcium signaling to both calcineurin regulation and autophagy induction. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH9 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265849 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH19 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265836 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
S100G | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-268517 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
31731478 |
Intracellular calcium ion content is tightly regulated for the maintenance of cellular functions and cell survival. Calbindin-D9k (CaBP-9k) is responsible for regulating the distribution of cytosolic free-calcium ions. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CAMK2D |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-255953 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
19725819 |
Upon binding of the Ca2+/calmodulin complex to the binding domain of CaMKII, it is activated via autophosphorylation, then remaining active independent of of Ca2+ levels. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
AMPA | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264941 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Dopaminergic Synapse, Glutamatergic synapse |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates
|
Synaptic_vesicle_exocytosis |
0.7 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264954 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Neuron |
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. |
|
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264355 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
Neuron |
pmid |
sentence |
11988172 |
Ca(2+) influx through voltage-gated channels initiates the exocytotic fusion of synaptic vesicles to the plasma membrane. |
|
Publications: |
2 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Neurotransmitters release, Oxytocin signaling |
+ |
GRID2 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264952 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH4 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265844 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
SLC24A3 | down-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264391 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30173760 |
K+-dependent Na+-Ca2+ Exchangers (NCKX) are bi-directional plasma membrane Ca2+ transporters which belong to the Solute Carrier Family 24 A (SLC24 A) of membrane transporters. NCKXs operate via the alternating access model and mediate the extrusion of one Ca2+ ion coupled with one K+ ion in exchange for four Na+ ions (4Na+↔ 1Ca2+ + 1 K+) |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRIA2 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264948 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
NMDA | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264931 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). In contrast, group I mGluRs increase the intracellular Ca2+ concentration via a classical Gq-mediated mechanism that triggers release from intracellular stores through IP3 receptors |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Dopaminergic Synapse, Glutamatergic synapse |
+ |
LETM1 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-262541 |
|
|
Mus musculus |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29123128 |
LETM1 is a mitochondrial inner membrane protein and several reports suggest that it mediates mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake and extrusion in a gradient-dependent manner |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Mus Musculus |
+ |
Amyloid_fibril_formation | up-regulates
|
calcium(2+) |
0.7 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-255481 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
15621017 |
It has been reported that Aβ can result in an increase in intracellular Ca2+, which in turn can activates CaMK. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRM1 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264932 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
CACNA2D3 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-266853 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
27583705 |
Our findings showed that increased intracellular calcium (Ca2+ ) mediated by overexpression of CACNA2D3 induced mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis, upregulation of NLK (through the Wnt/Ca2+ pathway) and inhibition of the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
GRIA1 | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264947 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. This is widely acknowledged for NMDARs, which have a high Ca2+ conductance, but Ca2+ flux through AMPARs and KARs can still be substantial. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
SLC24A4 | down-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264392 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
30173760 |
K+-dependent Na+-Ca2+ Exchangers (NCKX) are bi-directional plasma membrane Ca2+ transporters which belong to the Solute Carrier Family 24 A (SLC24 A) of membrane transporters. NCKXs operate via the alternating access model and mediate the extrusion of one Ca2+ ion coupled with one K+ ion in exchange for four Na+ ions (4Na+↔ 1Ca2+ + 1 K+) |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH12 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265830 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
MGluR | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-264930 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
29953871 |
Ca2+ is arguably the most important second messenger in the brain because of its pivotal roles in presynaptic neurotransmitter release, postsynaptic responses, and plasticity induction. iGluRs and mGluRs can generate intracellular Ca2+ signals, albeit by different mechanisms, whose crosstalk has not been thoroughly explored (Figure 2C). iGluRs allow the influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon pore opening. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
Pathways: | Glutamatergic synapse |
+ |
calcium(2+) | up-regulates activity
chemical activation
|
CDH13 |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-265831 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
22535893 |
Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules that play critical roles in animal morphogenesis. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
MCU_MICUB_variant | up-regulates quantity
relocalization
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-270864 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
32315830 |
MCU is a Ca2+-selective channel that mediates mitochondrial Ca2+ influx. The human channel contains tetrameric pore-forming MCU, regulatory subunits MICU1/2, and EMRE that is required both for channel function and MICU1/2-mediated Ca2+ regulation. |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |
+ |
IGF1R | up-regulates
|
calcium(2+) |
0.8 |
Identifier |
Residue |
Sequence |
Organism |
Cell Line |
SIGNOR-255100 |
|
|
Homo sapiens |
|
pmid |
sentence |
15829723 |
Mechanical loading increases IGF-I release, and IGF-I can stimulate Ca2+ influx and thereby activate calcineurin |
|
Publications: |
1 |
Organism: |
Homo Sapiens |