Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Atypical SLCs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Atypical Solute Carrier Families (Atypical SLCs) are novel plausible secondary active or facilitative transporter proteins that share ancestral background with the known solute carrier families (SLCs). However, they have not been assigned a name according to the SLC root system, or been classified into any of the existing SLC families.[1][2]
![]() | This article may be too technical for most readers to understand. (August 2017) |
Remove ads
Atypical major facilitator superfamily transport families
Summarize
Perspective
Most atypical SLCs are families within the major facilitator superfamily (MFS).[3] These atypical SLCs are plausible secondary active or facilitative transporter proteins that share ancestry with the known solute carriers.[1][2][4] They are, however, not named according to the SLC root system, or classified into any of the existing SLC families.[1] Atypical MFS transporter families (ATMFs) are categorised based on their sequence similarity and phylogenetic closeness.[3]
Some Atypical SLC of MFS type are: OCA2, CLN3, SPNS1, SPNS2, SPNS3, SV2A, SV2B, SV2C, SVOP, SVOPL, MFSD1, MFSD2A, MFSD2B, MFSD3, MFSD4A,[5] MFSD4B, MFSD5, MFSD6, MFSD6L, MFSD8, MFSD9,[5] MFSD10, MFSD11, MFSD12, MFSD13A, MFSD14A, MFSD14B, UNC93A[6] and UNC93B1. All these are atypical SLCs found within the Major facilitator superfamily. Also TMEM104 (APC clan), OCA2 (IT clan) and CLN3 (having no clan) are atypical SLCs in humans. [7][8][9]
Remove ads
Non-MFS transport families
Although most atypical SLCs are from the major facilitator superfamily, there are exceptions: TMEM104 (APC superfamily), OCA2 (IT superfamily) and CLN3 (unknown superfamily).[1]
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads