IgSF CAM

IgSF CAMs (Immunoglobulin-like Cell Adhesion Molecules) are cell adhesion molecules that belong to Immunoglobulin superfamily.[1] It is regarded as the most diverse superfamily of CAMs. This family is characterized by their extracellular domains containing Ig-like domains. The Ig domains are then followed by Fibronectin type III domain repeats and IgSFs are anchored to the membrane by a GPI moiety. This family is involved in both homophilic or heterophilic binding and has the ability to bind integrins or different IgSF CAMs.

Immunoglobulin-like adhesion molecules
Identifiers
SymbolIgSF CAM
Membranome221

Examples

Junctional adhesion molecules
Identifiers
SymbolJAM
InterProIPR029871
Membranome212

Here is a list of some molecules of this family:

gollark: The other^6 gollark lies iff you know what iff means.
gollark: The other^5 gollark is truthful iff it predicts that you will cooperate with CooperateBot.
gollark: The other⁴ gollark actually just tells you the first bit of the SHA256 hash of your question encoded in UTF-8.
gollark: Anyway, the other³ gollark is truthful iff it predicts (it is only wrong 0.4% of the time) that you will identify it as a falsehood-telling gollark.
gollark: Correct.

References

  1. Abel Lajtha; Naren L. Banik; Naren Banik (2007). Handbook of neurochemistry and molecular neurobiology: Neural protein metabolism and function. シュプリンガー・ジャパン株式会社. pp. 41–. ISBN 978-0-387-30346-8. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
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