Human

PRSS2 - Serine Protease 2

Alias:
TRY2
TRY8
TRYP2
加入收藏
Basic Information
Sequence Homology
Related Diseases and Mutations
Transcripts & Proteins
Gene Expression
Interactions
Related Mouse Models
Related Drugs
References Literature
This gene belongs to the trypsin family of serine proteases and encodes anionic trypsinogen. It is part of a cluster of trypsinogen genes that are located within the T cell receptor beta locus. Enzymes of this family cleave peptide bonds that follow lysine or arginine residues. This protein is found at high levels in pancreatic juice and its upregulation is a characteristic feature of pancreatitis. This protein has also been found to activate pro-urokinase in ovarian tumors, suggesting a function in tumor invasion. In addition, this enzyme is able to cleave across the type II collagen triple helix in rheumatoid arthritis synovitis tissue, potentially participating in the degradation of type II collagen-rich cartilage matrix. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants.[provided by RefSeq, Jan 2015]

Basic Information

NCBI
Transcripts
Exons
Length
MW (kDa)
Mutations
Related Diseases
Related Mouse Models
Reference
2
5
3591 bp
26.49
1
2
--
12

PRSS2 Genetics information (+)

GRCh38

Sequence Homology

Related Diseases and Mutations

#
Disease
Anatomical Category
Score
Mutations
No data available

Transcripts & Proteins

Table View
Tile View
#
Transcript
Length(nt)
Exon Count
CDS(bp)
Protein
Length(aa)
No data available
* This data comes from NCBI.

Gene Expression

Tissue-specific RNA expression

Organ
Abundance
Alphabetical

Cell-specific RNA expression

Organ
Abundance
Alphabetical

Interactions

Acting
Regulation
Detail
Mechanism
Target
Residues
Reference
Score
No data available

Related Mouse Models

Type
Name
MGI
Strain of Origin
Publications
Mutations
No data available

Related Drugs

Name
CAS Number
Status
Phase
Link
No data available

References Literature

Title
PMID
Journal
Year
IF
No Data Found!
Wechat
Mutation Direct
Sequence
Comparison
Al agent
Tutorials
Back to top