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Percent identity with other species by BLAST analysis: Human, Gorilla, Monkey, Marmoset, Mouse, Rat, Dog, Bovine, Hamster, Rabbit, Pig (100%) Bat, Elephant, Panda (94%).
G protein-coupled receptors (GPRs), also known as seven transmembrane receptors, heptahelical receptors or 7TM receptors, comprise a superfamily of proteins that play a role in many different stimulus-response pathways. G protein coupled receptors translate extracellular signals into intracellular signals (G protein activation) and they respond to a variety of signaling molecules, such as hormones and neurotransmitters. GPR153 (G protein-coupled receptor 153), also known as PGR1, is a 609 amino acid multi-pass membrane protein that functions as an orphan receptor and belongs to the GPR1 family. The gene encoding GPR153 maps to human chromosome 1, which spans 260 million base pairs, contains over 3,000 genes and comprises nearly 8% of the human genome.
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Protein Aliases: G protein-coupled receptor 153; G protein-coupled receptor PGR1; G-protein coupled receptor PGR1; Probable G-protein coupled receptor 153; putative G-protein coupled receptor 153
Gene Aliases: 1110065N12Rik; AI449320; GPR153; I79_024145; PGR1
UniProt ID: (Human) Q6NV75, (Mouse) Q8K0Z9
Entrez Gene ID: (Human) 387509, (Dog) 489630, (Rat) 619550, (Mouse) 100129, (Chinese hamster) 100755439
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