The world's first wiki where authorship really matters (Nature Genetics, 2008). Due credit and reputation for authors. Imagine a global collaborative knowledge base for original thoughts. Search thousands of articles and collaborate with scientists around the globe.

wikigene or wiki gene protein drug chemical gene disease author authorship tracking collaborative publishing evolutionary knowledge reputation system wiki2.0 global collaboration genes proteins drugs chemicals diseases compound
Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

The novel murine Ca2+-binding protein, Scarf, is differentially expressed during epidermal differentiation.

Calcium (Ca2+) signaling-dependent systems, such as the epidermal differentiation process, must effectively respond to variations in Ca2+ concentration. Members of the Ca2+-binding proteins play a central function in the transduction of Ca2+ signals, exerting their roles through a Ca2+-dependent interaction with their target proteins, spatially and temporally. By performing a suppression subtractive hybridization screen we identified a novel mouse gene, Scarf (skin calmodulin-related factor), which has homology to calmodulin (CaM)-like Ca2+-binding protein genes and is exclusively expressed in differentiating keratinocytes in the epidermis. The Scarf open reading frame encodes a 148-amino acid protein that contains four conserved EF-hand motifs (predicted to be Ca2+- binding domains) and has homology to mouse CaM, human CaM-like protein, hClp, and human CaM-like skin protein, hClsp. The functionality of Scarf EF-hand domains was assayed with a radioactive Ca2+-binding method. By Southern blot and computational genome sequence analysis, a highly related gene, Scarf2, was found 15 kb downstream of Scarf on mouse chromosome 13. The functional Scarf Ca2+-binding domains suggest a role in the regulation of epidermal differentiation through the control of Ca2+-mediated signaling.[1]

References

 
WikiGenes - Universities