Page last updated: 2024-11-05

methylmercuric chloride

Description Research Excerpts Clinical Trials Roles Classes Pathways Study Profile Bioassays Related Drugs Related Conditions Protein Interactions Research Growth

Description

methylmercuric chloride: RN given refers to unlabeled cpd [Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), National Library of Medicine, extracted Dec-2023]

Cross-References

ID SourceID
PubMed CID409301
CHEBI ID28216
SCHEMBL ID565953
MeSH IDM0046143

Synonyms (58)

Synonym
mercury methylchloride
methyl mercury (ii) chloride
chloro(methyl)mercury
[hgclme]
monomethylmercury chloride
mehgcl
ch3hgcl
CHEBI:28216 ,
mercurymethyl chloride
mercury methyl chloride
nsc19998
monomethyl mercury chloride
chloromethylmercury
methyl meruric chloride
mercury, chloromethyl-
wln: g-hg-1
caspan
methylmercuric chloride
NCGC00090848-01
methyl mercuric chloride
caspan (van)
nsc 19998
ccris 3968
methyl mercuric(ii) chloride
methylmercury monochloride
mercurymethylchloride
brn 3600218
chloromethyl mercury
methylmerkurichlorid [czech]
einecs 204-064-2
methylmercury chloride
115-09-3
methylmercury(ii) chloride, cl ~13 %
methyl mercuric (ii) chloride
methyl mercury chloride
monomethymercuric chloride
monomethylmercuric chloride
methylmercury(ii) chloride
NCGC00090848-02
tox21_202524
cas-115-09-3
methylmercuric(ii) chloride
dtxsid5020813 ,
dtxcid90813
NCGC00260073-01
hsdb 7785
unii-rwz4l3o1x0
4-04-00-04436 (beilstein handbook reference)
methylmerkurichlorid
FT-0628900
AKOS015903736
SCHEMBL565953
methylmercury(2) chloride
BABMCXWQNSQAOC-UHFFFAOYSA-M
methyl mercury, chloro
mfcd00013592
methylmercury(ii) chloride, pestanal(r), analytical standard
Q21010649

Research Excerpts

Toxicity

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" On the basis of vital dye exclusion, HgCl2 was less toxic to proximal tubule cells in culture than CH3HgCl after 24 hr of exposure, whether cytotoxicity was based on LC50 values (34."( Primary cultures of rabbit renal proximal tubule cells. III. Comparative cytotoxicity of inorganic and organic mercury.
Aleo, MD; Kostyniak, PJ; Taub, ML, 1992
)
0.28
"The toxic effects of mercurials on the thyroid activity of Clarias batrachus were evaluated after exposure for 45, 90, and 180 days during gonadal recrudescence."( Toxic effects of mercurials on thyroid function of the catfish, Clarias batrachus (L.).
Joy, KP; Kirubagaran, R, 1989
)
0.28
" This new testing system appears to be a sensitive method of measuring the direct effects of toxic chemicals which yields results in a short term."( Toxic effects of chemicals on mouse post-blastocyst development--a trial to establish a testing system for embryotoxicity.
Katayama, S; Matsumoto, N, 1985
)
0.27
"05 times more toxic than mercuric chloride (HgCl2) and emisan 6 (methoxyethyl mercury chloride), respectively, for 96 hr."( Toxic effects of three mercurial compounds on survival, and histology of the kidney of the catfish Clarias batrachus (L.).
Joy, KP; Kirubagaran, R, 1988
)
0.27
" In some cases, mercuric chloride and monomethyl mercury were equally toxic at comparable concentrations."( Comparison of methods to measure acute metal and organometal toxicity to natural aquatic microbial communities.
Gilmour, CC; Jonas, RB; Stoner, DL; Tuttle, JH; Weir, MM, 1984
)
0.27
" A water-soluble, ethanol-insoluble black complex (GX) formed from HgCl2, Na2SeO3 and GSH was less toxic than HgCl2, but the cytotoxicity of bis(methylmercuric) selenide (BMS) seemed to be similar to that of methylmercury."( Comparison of cytotoxicity of mercury-selenium and mercury compounds on cultured cells.
Doi, R; Kobayashi, T; Mochizuki, Y, 1984
)
0.27
" Biochemical investigation also demonstrated a significant suppression of amino acid uptake (protein synthesis) in the CNS under the toxic influence of MeHg."( Protective effects of selenium against methylmercury neurotoxicity: a morphological and biochemical study.
Chang, LW, 1983
)
0.27
" The results demonstrate that methylmercuric chloride, the most toxic of mercuric compounds, causes chromosome stickiness and clumping leading to reduced mitotic divisions."( Methylmercury toxicity: in vivo evaluation of teratogenesis and cytogenetic changes.
Curle, DC; Persaud, TV; Ray, M, 1983
)
0.27
" These TD25 values were compared with LD50 values obtained from the literature and a correlation was found."( Acute toxicity of organic solvents, heavy metals and DDT tested in cultures of mouse neuroblastoma cells.
Lewné, M; Peterson, A; Walum, E, 1981
)
0.26
" The LD50 of MMC for fetuses was determined to be 16."( Maternal and fetal toxicity of methylmercuric chloride administered to pregnant Fischer 344 rats.
Han, DH; Lee, JH, 1995
)
0.29
" However, the sensitivity of cellular respiration to the toxic effects of MMC appeared to parallel the normal oxygen demands of the cell type."( Oxidative stress in neurotoxic effects of methylmercury poisoning.
Choi, BH; Yee, S, 1996
)
0.29
" PMA was about 3- or 5-fold more effective in inducing endoreduplication than CH3HgCl or Hg2+ at equivalent toxic concentrations, respectively."( Distinct genotoxicity of phenylmercury acetate in human lymphocytes as compared with other mercury compounds.
Lee, CH; Lin, RH; Lin-Shiau, SY; Liu, SH, 1997
)
0.3
" In serum-deprived cultures, LD50 values were 140."( Heavy-metal toxicity in an insect cell line. Effects of cadmium chloride, mercuric chloride and methylmercuric chloride on cell viability and proliferation in Aedes albopictus cells.
Braeckman, B; Raes, H; Van Hoye, D, 1997
)
0.3
"The toxic effect of HgCl2 and MeHgCl from the L2 cells was about 100-700-fold higher than of the dental composite components."( Cytotoxicity of dental composite components and mercury compounds in lung cells.
Benschop, H; Durner, J; Forth, W; Hickel, R; Hume, WR; Kehe, K; Kunzelmann, KH; Reichl, FX; Spahl, W; Walther, UI, 2001
)
0.31
"5 microm) did not produce any sign of toxic reactions."( Cytotoxicity of ingredients of various dental materials and related compounds in L2- and A549 cells.
Hickel, R; Kehe, K; Liebl, B; Nilius, M; Reichl, FX; Walther, SC; Walther, UI, 2002
)
0.31
" In both assays, MeHgCl was the most toxic substance."( Cytotoxicity of dental composite (co)monomers and the amalgam component Hg(2+) in human gingival fibroblasts.
Esters, M; Hickel, R; Kehe, K; Kleinsasser, N; Reichl, FX; Seiss, M; Simon, S, 2006
)
0.33
" These toxic effects of MeHg were found in well correlation of Hg contents of various tissues (blood, cerebral cortex, liver and kidney) in rats."( Differential neurotoxic effects of methylmercury and mercuric sulfide in rats.
Chuu, JJ; Lin-Shiau, SY; Liu, SH, 2007
)
0.34
" These results indicate that low-dose MeHg toxicity may be related to an induction of tau phosphorylation through an oxidative stress-dependent mechanism and that blockade of this pathway may attenuate the toxic effects of MeHg."( Low-dose methylmercury-induced oxidative stress, cytotoxicity, and tau-hyperphosphorylation in human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells.
Agrawal, K; George, W; Mondal, D; Petroni, D; Tsai, J, 2012
)
0.38
" Furthermore, this research indicated that TP pretreatment significantly mitigated the toxic effects of MeHg."( Excitotoxicity and oxidative damages induced by methylmercury in rat cerebral cortex and the protective effects of tea polyphenols.
Deng, Y; Feng, S; Liu, W; Wei, Y; Xu, B; Xu, Z; Yang, H, 2014
)
0.4
" Results showed that treatment with MeHg caused adverse effects on fetal growth parameters and ossification of the bones."( The prenatal toxic effect of methylmercury on the development of the appendicular skeleton of rat fetuses and the protective role of vitamin E.
Abd El-Aziz, GS; El-Fark, MM; Saleh, HA, 2012
)
0.38
" The current study shows that D3 mESCs differentiate efficiently into neural cells involving a neurosphere-like state and that this system is suitable to detect adverse effects of neurodevelopmental toxicants."( Neural differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells as a tool to assess developmental neurotoxicity in vitro.
Gulich, K; Hayess, K; Luch, A; Oelgeschläger, M; Pohl, EE; Riebeling, C; Seiler, AE; Sittner, D; Slawik, B; Visan, A, 2012
)
0.38
"Exposure to methylmercury (MeHg) acutely at high levels, or via chronic low-level dietary exposure from daily fish consumption, can lead to adverse neurological effects in both the adult and developing conceptus."( Expression of human oxoguanine glycosylase 1 or formamidopyrimidine glycosylase in human embryonic kidney 293 cells exacerbates methylmercury toxicity in vitro.
McCallum, GP; Ondovcik, SL; Preston, TJ; Wells, PG, 2013
)
0.39
" Using gene ontology term and pathway enrichment analysis of the validated targets of the miRNAs deregulated by the toxic treatment, the possible effect of MeHgCl exposure on signalling pathways involved in axon guidance and learning and memory processes was revealed."( miRNA expression profiling in a human stem cell-based model as a tool for developmental neurotoxicity testing.
Bal-Price, A; Fabbri, M; Gribaldo, L; Laurenza, I; Pallocca, G; Pamies, D; Sacco, MG, 2013
)
0.39
" Methylmercury (MeHg) is one of the most toxic of the mercury compounds."( Protective effect of prolactin against methylmercury-induced mutagenicity and cytotoxicity on human lymphocytes.
Burbano, RR; Cunha, LR; da Costa, ET; da Rocha, CA; Diniz, DL; Guimarães, AP; Leal, MF; Moreira-Nunes, CA; Pontes, TB; Silva-Pereira, LC, 2014
)
0.4
" Compared with coarse particles, ultrafine particles (UFP) absorb or condense higher concentration of toxic air pollutants and are easily inhaled into the lung."( Combined toxicity of amorphous silica nanoparticles and methylmercury to human lung epithelial cells.
Duan, J; Jin, M; Li, C; Li, Y; Sun, Z; Wang, Y; Yu, Y, 2015
)
0.42
" This study compared for the first time toxic effects of organic MeHg chloride (MeHgCl) and thiomersal as well as inorganic mercury chloride (HgCl2) in differentiated human neurons (LUHMES) and human astrocytes (CCF-STTG1)."( Toxicity of organic and inorganic mercury species in differentiated human neurons and human astrocytes.
Blagojevic, L; Ebert, F; Fitkau, R; Leist, M; Lohren, H; Schildknecht, S; Schwerdtle, T, 2015
)
0.42
" Experimental results indicated that both these forms of mercury were toxic to all the neural cells, but at very different degrees."( In vitro evaluation of inorganic and methyl mercury mediated cytotoxic effect on neural cells derived from different animal species.
Lu, Y; Tong, J; Wang, Y, 2016
)
0.43
"Methylmercury (MeHg) is an extremely dangerous environmental pollutant that induces severe toxic effects in the central nervous system."( Memantine, a Low-Affinity NMDA Receptor Antagonist, Protects against Methylmercury-Induced Cytotoxicity of Rat Primary Cultured Cortical Neurons, Involvement of Ca
Deng, Y; Feng, S; Liu, W; Xu, B; Xu, Z; Yang, T, 2017
)
0.46
"Mercury is one of the most toxic elements threatening the biosphere, with levels steadily rising due to both natural and human activities."( Disruption of selenium transport and function is a major contributor to mercury toxicity in zebrafish larvae.
Crawford, AM; Dolgova, NV; George, GN; Krone, PH; MacDonald, TC; Nehzati, S; Pickering, IJ; Summers, KL, 2019
)
0.51
" We have previously found that reactive sulfur species such as glutathione persulfide, glutathione polysulfide, protein-bound persulfides, and hydrogen sulfide can bind to methylmercury to give bismethylmercury sulfide, which is less toxic than methylmercury."( Lipophilic compounds in garlic decrease the toxicity of methylmercury by forming sulfur adducts.
Abiko, Y; Akiyama, M; Katayama, Y; Kumagai, Y, 2021
)
0.62
" Perturbations of these endpoints are described as common key events in adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) specific for DNT."( Combining in vitro assays and mathematical modelling to study developmental neurotoxicity induced by chemical mixtures.
Bal-Price, A; Bopp, SK; Carpi, D; Mendoza-de Gyves, E; Paini, A; Pistollato, F; Worth, A, 2021
)
0.62

Pharmacokinetics

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic effect on platelet activation of a single 800 mg oral dose of BM 13."( Single dose pharmacokinetics and effects on platelet function of the thromboxane receptor blocker BM 13.177.
Endele, R; Kaufmann, B; Neugebauer, G; Patscheke, H; Staiger, C; Stegmeier, K; Strein, K, 1986
)
0.27
" This group of predominantly volatile and lipophilic chemicals was selected on the basis that their kinetics have been well-studied and can be predicted in mice, rats, and humans using physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models."( Assessing the dose-dependency of allometric scaling performance using physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling.
Gargas, ML; Kirman, CR; Meek, ME; Sweeney, LM, 2003
)
0.32
" When rats received it intravenously, MeHg·Cl showed 20-fold greater plasma and 2-fold greater blood concentrations of Hg than MeHg-Cys, indicating that their pharmacokinetic properties are different."( Comparison of in vivo with in vitro pharmacokinetics of mercury between methylmercury chloride and methylmercury cysteine using rats and Caco2 cells.
Matsumura, N; Mori, N; Murakami, T; Sasaki, M; Tsukada, E; Yamamoto, M; Yokooji, T, 2012
)
0.38
"A physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was developed to simulate the uptake, distribution, and elimination of inorganic mercury [Hg(II)] and methylmercury (MeHg) in a marine fish, Terapon jarbua."( Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic Model for Inorganic and Methylmercury in a Marine Fish.
Wang, WX; Wang, X, 2015
)
0.42

Bioavailability

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" We also determined the oral bioavailability of methylmercury during these trials to test for age-related changes."( The oral bioavailability and toxicokinetics of methylmercury in common loon (Gavia immer) chicks.
Fournier, F; Hines, RK; Karasov, WH; Kenow, KP; Meyer, MW, 2002
)
0.31
"Mercury exposure induces endothelial dysfunction leading to loss of endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation due to decreased nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability via increased oxidative stress."( Modulation of vasodilator response via the nitric oxide pathway after acute methyl mercury chloride exposure in rats.
Fahim, M; Omanwar, S; Ravi, K; Saidullah, B, 2013
)
0.39
" Since the photodegradation of MeHg is the most important known abiotic process able to demethylate MeHg, this study investigated the role of sunlight on MeHg bioavailability in freshwater environments."( Diffusive gradients in thin films for predicting methylmercury bioavailability in freshwaters after photodegradation.
Bayona, JM; Díez, S; Fernández-Gómez, C, 2015
)
0.42
" Net methylation of Hg(II) appears to be correlated with factors that affect the activity of the anaerobic microbial community and factors that increase the bioavailability of Hg(II) to these organisms."( Relative contributions of mercury bioavailability and microbial growth rate on net methylmercury production by anaerobic mixed cultures.
Deshusses, MA; Hsu-Kim, H; Kucharzyk, KH; Porter, KA, 2015
)
0.42

Dosage Studied

Rats were dosed with methylmercuric chloride, either by gastric gavage (5 x 10 mg kg-1 body weight over a 15-day period) or in their drinking water. In both the "odor" and negative geotaxis tests, methylmerCuric chloride affected vocalization rates in a nonlinear dose-response fashion.

ExcerptRelevanceReference
"Female monkeys were dosed with 0, 10, 25 or 50 micrograms/kg/day of mercury as methylmercuric chloride."( Effects of pre- plus postnatal exposure to methylmercury in the monkey on fixed interval and discrimination reversal performance.
Rice, DC, 1992
)
0.28
" Cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) were dosed from birth to 7 years of age with 50 micrograms/kg/day of mercury as methyl mercuric chloride."( Exposure to methyl mercury from birth to adulthood impairs high-frequency hearing in monkeys.
Gilbert, SG; Rice, DC, 1992
)
0.28
" The highest Cu concentration was found in HgCl2 dosed rat liver."( Rapid changes in concentrations of essential elements in organs of rats exposed to methylmercury chloride and mercuric chloride as shown by simultaneous multielemental analysis.
Muto, H; Shinada, M; Takizawa, Y; Tokuta, K, 1991
)
0.28
" One group of monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) was dosed from birth onward with 50 micrograms/kg/day of mercury as methyl mercury."( Effects of developmental exposure to methyl mercury on spatial and temporal visual function in monkeys.
Gilbert, SG; Rice, DC, 1990
)
0.28
" To investigate why systemic dosing produced effects opposite to those observed with local application of MeHg, various doses of MeHg were tested in the local and systemic paradigms, including doses which yielded equal concentrations of Hg in the retina."( Increased axonal transport in the rat optic system after systemic exposure to methylmercury: differential effects in local vs systemic exposure conditions.
Aschner, M; Finkelstein, JN; Rodier, PM, 1987
)
0.27
" Cytogenetic studies revealed significant clumping of chromosomes in metaphase at all dose levels and the frequency of clumping increased as dosage increased."( In vivo evaluation of teratogenesis and cytogenetic changes following methylmercuric chloride treatment.
Curle, DC; Persaud, TV; Ray, M, 1987
)
0.27
" Two dosage levels were studied; 4 and 8 mg/kg."( Methyl mercury ototoxicity in mice determined by auditory brainstem responses.
Wassick, KH; Yonovitz, A,
)
0.13
" Severity of damage increased with the increased dosage of mercury."( Ultrastructure of the testis of Pekin ducks fed methyl mercury chloride: seminiferous epithelium.
Bhatnagar, MK; McNeil, SI, 1985
)
0.27
" Brain mercury concentrations were measured in order to find the dose-response relationship and the time dependence of the MMC-induced sleep disorder."( Effect of methylmercury chloride on sleep-waking rhythms in rats.
Arito, H; Hara, N; Torii, S, 1983
)
0.27
" Mice were orally dosed with [203 Hg]methylmercury chloride (10 mg/kg) for 1 to 9 days."( Methylmercury distribution, metabolism, and neurotoxicity in the mouse brain.
Buncel, E; Norris, AR; Racz, WJ; Vandewater, LJ, 1983
)
0.27
" In both the "odor" and negative geotaxis tests, methylmercuric chloride affected vocalization rates in a nonlinear dose-response fashion."( Ultrasonic vocalizations as diagnostic tools in studies of developmental toxicity: an investigation of the effects of prenatal treatment with methylmercuric chloride.
Adams, J; Miller, DR; Nelson, CJ,
)
0.13
" The animals were dosed for 7 days with MMC 1 mg/kg/d and some were then kept without treatment for a further."( Fluctuation of trace elements during methylmercury toxication and chelation therapy.
Bapu, C; Purohit, RC; Sood, PP, 1994
)
0.29
"Rats were dosed with methylmercuric chloride, either by gastric gavage (5 x 10 mg kg-1 body weight over a 15-day period), or in their drinking water (20 mg methylmercuric chloride l-1 for 14 or 42 days)."( The localization of mercury and metallothionein in the cerebellum of rats experimentally exposed to methylmercury.
Jasani, B; Leyshon-Sørland, K; Morgan, AJ, 1994
)
0.29
"Captive great egret (Ardea albus) nestlings were maintained as controls or were dosed with methylmercury chloride at low (0."( Histologic, neurologic, and immunologic effects of methylmercury in captive great egrets.
Blackmore, CG; Bouton, SN; Frederick, PC; Harrison, J; McGill, HC; Richey, LJ; Schumacher, IM; Spalding, MG, 2000
)
0.31
" The blood concentration-time curves for individuals dosed during feather development (initiated 35 days post hatch) were best described by a one-compartment toxicokinetic model with an elimination half-life of 3 days."( The oral bioavailability and toxicokinetics of methylmercury in common loon (Gavia immer) chicks.
Fournier, F; Hines, RK; Karasov, WH; Kenow, KP; Meyer, MW, 2002
)
0.31
" The assay was first assessed using chicken WBCs dosed with MeHg in vitro either in whole blood or as isolated cells and later using blood of wild common loons exposed in vivo to a range of dietary MeHg and having a range of blood-Hg concentrations."( Assessment of white blood cell phagocytosis as an immunological indicator of methylmercury exposure in birds.
Chan, HM; Holloway, J; Scheuhammer, AM, 2003
)
0.32
" Dose-response curves of 10(-9)-10(-3)M of methylmercury chloride have also been performed in vitro for evaluation of these two immune functions."( Contrasting changes of sensitivity by lymphocytes and neutrophils to mercury in developing grey seals.
Fournier, M; Lalancette, A; Measures, L; Morin, Y, 2003
)
0.32
"75 for dose-response assessments in which toxicity is attributed to the formation of a reactive metabolite from an inhaled compound."( Assessing the dose-dependency of allometric scaling performance using physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling.
Gargas, ML; Kirman, CR; Meek, ME; Sweeney, LM, 2003
)
0.32
" Mitochondrial assays showed a clear dose-response and exposure time-response to the metals."( Mitochondrial viability and apoptosis induced by aluminum, mercuric mercury and methylmercury in cell lines of neural origin.
Tähti, H; Toimela, T, 2004
)
0.32
" For comparison, PND 16 mice received an IM injection of concentrated dosing suspensions (2 microl dosing vol."( Mercury concentrations in brain and kidney following ethylmercury, methylmercury and Thimerosal administration to neonatal mice.
Burka, LT; Harris, MW; Harry, GJ, 2004
)
0.32
"We injected doses of methylmercury into the air cells of eggs of 26 species of birds and examined the dose-response curves of embryo survival."( Species differences in the sensitivity of avian embryos to methylmercury.
Erwin, CA; Heinz, GH; Hoffman, DJ; Klimstra, JD; Kondrad, SL; Stebbins, KR, 2009
)
0.35
" Therefore, to explore the mechanisms contribute to MeHg-induced neurotoxicity, rats were exposed to different dosage of methylmercury chloride (CH3 ClHg) (0, 4, and 12 μmol kg(-1)) for 4 weeks to evaluate the neurotoxic effects of MeHg."( Excitotoxicity and oxidative damages induced by methylmercury in rat cerebral cortex and the protective effects of tea polyphenols.
Deng, Y; Feng, S; Liu, W; Wei, Y; Xu, B; Xu, Z; Yang, H, 2014
)
0.4
" To our knowledge, the potential of methylmercury chloride to cause acute in vitro developmental neurotoxicity (DNT) at such a low dosage has not been reported."( Single-neuron axonal pathfinding under geometric guidance: low-dose-methylmercury developmental neurotoxicity test.
Fang, Y; Gao, BZ; Kindy, MS; Sheng, L; Sweeney, AJ; Wei, L; Xi, T, 2014
)
0.4
" IC50 values of the WT and mutants for the mercury compounds were derived from dose-response analyses."( Functional and molecular effects of mercury compounds on the human OCTN1 cation transporter: C50 and C136 are the targets for potent inhibition.
Galluccio, M; Iannì, M; Indiveri, C; Peta, V; Pochini, L; Scalise, M, 2015
)
0.42
" Yet dosing studies are generally carried out using methylmercury chloride."( Form of Dietary Methylmercury does not Affect Total Mercury Accumulation in the Tissues of Zebra Finch.
Cristol, DA; Rice, GW; Varian-Ramos, CW; Whitney, M, 2017
)
0.46
[information is derived through text-mining from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Drug Classes (3)

ClassDescription
chlorine molecular entityA halogen molecular entity containing one or more atoms of chlorine.
mercury coordination entity
one-carbon compoundAn organic molecular entity containing a single carbon atom (C1).
[compound class information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Protein Targets (53)

Potency Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverage (µ)Min (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Chain A, MAJOR APURINIC/APYRIMIDINIC ENDONUCLEASEHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.25120.003245.467312,589.2998AID2517
Chain A, HADH2 proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency20.22080.025120.237639.8107AID886; AID893
Chain B, HADH2 proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency20.22080.025120.237639.8107AID886; AID893
LuciferasePhotinus pyralis (common eastern firefly)Potency5.62430.007215.758889.3584AID1224835
interleukin 8Homo sapiens (human)Potency59.55720.047349.480674.9780AID651758
15-lipoxygenase, partialHomo sapiens (human)Potency15.84890.012610.691788.5700AID887
pregnane X receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency79.43280.025127.9203501.1870AID651751
hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha subunitHomo sapiens (human)Potency9.19503.189029.884159.4836AID1224846; AID1224894
RAR-related orphan receptor gammaMus musculus (house mouse)Potency2.99690.006038.004119,952.5996AID1159521; AID1159523
SMAD family member 2Homo sapiens (human)Potency24.48720.173734.304761.8120AID1346859
SMAD family member 3Homo sapiens (human)Potency24.48720.173734.304761.8120AID1346859
GLI family zinc finger 3Homo sapiens (human)Potency33.00540.000714.592883.7951AID1259369; AID1259392
AR proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency17.90140.000221.22318,912.5098AID1259243; AID1259247; AID588515; AID588516; AID743036
aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family, member A1Homo sapiens (human)Potency0.70790.011212.4002100.0000AID1030
hypoxia-inducible factor 1, alpha subunit (basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor)Homo sapiens (human)Potency39.81070.00137.762544.6684AID2120
thyroid stimulating hormone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency1.58490.001318.074339.8107AID926; AID938
estrogen receptor 2 (ER beta)Homo sapiens (human)Potency22.94310.000657.913322,387.1992AID1259377; AID1259378
nuclear receptor subfamily 1, group I, member 3Homo sapiens (human)Potency31.59080.001022.650876.6163AID1224838; AID1224839; AID1224893
progesterone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency27.22270.000417.946075.1148AID1346784
glucocorticoid receptor [Homo sapiens]Homo sapiens (human)Potency21.15120.000214.376460.0339AID588533; AID720691; AID720692
retinoic acid nuclear receptor alpha variant 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency17.06900.003041.611522,387.1992AID1159552; AID1159553; AID1159555
retinoid X nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency4.41170.000817.505159.3239AID1159527; AID1159531; AID588544; AID588546
estrogen-related nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency45.10760.001530.607315,848.9004AID1224841; AID1224842; AID1224848; AID1224849; AID1259403
farnesoid X nuclear receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency24.78590.375827.485161.6524AID588526; AID588527; AID743217; AID743220
pregnane X nuclear receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency73.75930.005428.02631,258.9301AID1346982; AID720659
estrogen nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency32.89400.000229.305416,493.5996AID1259244; AID1259248; AID588513; AID588514; AID743069; AID743075; AID743077; AID743080; AID743091
peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor deltaHomo sapiens (human)Potency24.69260.001024.504861.6448AID588534; AID588535; AID743212; AID743215; AID743227
peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gammaHomo sapiens (human)Potency11.92240.001019.414170.9645AID588537; AID743094; AID743140; AID743191
vitamin D (1,25- dihydroxyvitamin D3) receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency19.57880.023723.228263.5986AID588541; AID588543; AID743223; AID743241
cytochrome P450, family 19, subfamily A, polypeptide 1, isoform CRA_aHomo sapiens (human)Potency27.22270.001723.839378.1014AID743083
thyroid stimulating hormone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency15.67690.001628.015177.1139AID1259385; AID1259395
activating transcription factor 6Homo sapiens (human)Potency30.51490.143427.612159.8106AID1159516; AID1159519
thyrotropin-releasing hormone receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency23.70910.154917.870243.6557AID1346877; AID1346891
nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B-cells 1 (p105), isoform CRA_aHomo sapiens (human)Potency10.533919.739145.978464.9432AID1159509; AID1159518
v-jun sarcoma virus 17 oncogene homolog (avian)Homo sapiens (human)Potency12.28590.057821.109761.2679AID1159526; AID1159528
Histone H2A.xCricetulus griseus (Chinese hamster)Potency23.09130.039147.5451146.8240AID1224845; AID1224896
cellular tumor antigen p53 isoform aHomo sapiens (human)Potency15.84890.316212.443531.6228AID902
15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase [NAD(+)] isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency15.84890.001815.663839.8107AID894
thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform aHomo sapiens (human)Potency28.18380.010039.53711,122.0200AID588545; AID588547
potassium voltage-gated channel subfamily H member 2 isoform dHomo sapiens (human)Potency25.11890.01789.637444.6684AID588834
thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency5.96300.000323.4451159.6830AID743065; AID743066; AID743067
histone deacetylase 9 isoform 3Homo sapiens (human)Potency29.48110.037617.082361.1927AID1259364; AID1259388
heat shock protein beta-1Homo sapiens (human)Potency47.64930.042027.378961.6448AID743210; AID743228
nuclear factor NF-kappa-B p105 subunit isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency39.81074.466824.832944.6684AID651749
nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency14.23180.000627.21521,122.0200AID651741; AID720636; AID743202; AID743219
nuclear receptor ROR-gamma isoform 1Mus musculus (house mouse)Potency0.79960.00798.23321,122.0200AID2546; AID2551
lethal factor (plasmid)Bacillus anthracis str. A2012Potency3.98110.020010.786931.6228AID912
Voltage-dependent calcium channel gamma-2 subunitMus musculus (house mouse)Potency17.17640.001557.789015,848.9004AID1259244
Cellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)Potency38.56570.002319.595674.0614AID651631; AID720552
Glutamate receptor 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency17.17640.001551.739315,848.9004AID1259244
Nuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)Potency6.68240.026622.448266.8242AID651802
ATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)Potency5.97330.011917.942071.5630AID651632; AID720516
Ataxin-2Homo sapiens (human)Potency4.84100.011912.222168.7989AID651632
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Biological Processes (151)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
negative regulation of cell population proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycleCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycle G2/M phase transitionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ER overload responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to glucose starvationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of miRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
in utero embryonic developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
somitogenesisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
release of cytochrome c from mitochondriaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
hematopoietic progenitor cell differentiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell proliferation involved in immune responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
B cell lineage commitmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell lineage commitmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to ischemiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleotide-excision repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
double-strand break repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein import into nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
autophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in cell cycle arrestCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in transcription of p21 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
Ras protein signal transductionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
gastrulationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
neuroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of neuroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein localizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of DNA replicationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell population proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
determination of adult lifespanCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
rRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to salt stressCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to inorganic substanceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to X-rayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to gamma radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of gene expressionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cardiac muscle cell apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cardiac muscle cell apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
glial cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
viral processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
glucose catabolic process to lactate via pyruvateCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cerebellum developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell growthCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitotic G1 DNA damage checkpoint signalingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of telomere maintenance via telomeraseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell differentiation in thymusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
tumor necrosis factor-mediated signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of tissue remodelingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to UVCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
multicellular organism growthCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of mitochondrial membrane permeabilityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to glucose starvationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
entrainment of circadian clock by photoperiodCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial DNA repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neuron apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription initiation-coupled chromatin remodelingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of proteolysisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of RNA polymerase II transcription preinitiation complex assemblyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to antibioticCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
fibroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of fibroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
circadian behaviorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
bone marrow developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
embryonic organ developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-tyrosine phosphorylationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein stabilizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of helicase activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein tetramerizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromosome organizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
neuron apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycleCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
hematopoietic stem cell differentiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of glial cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
type II interferon-mediated signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cardiac septum morphogenesisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of programmed necrotic cell deathCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complex assemblyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to endoplasmic reticulum stressCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
thymocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of thymocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
necroptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to hypoxiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to xenobiotic stimulusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to ionizing radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to gamma radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to UV-CCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
stem cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to actinomycin DCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of release of cytochrome c from mitochondriaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
replicative senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
oxidative stress-induced premature senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
oligodendrocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of execution phase of apoptosisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of mitophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of mitochondrial membrane permeability involved in apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of miRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of G1 to G0 transitionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of miRNA processingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of glucose catabolic process to lactate via pyruvateCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of pentose-phosphate shuntCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to hypoxiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of fibroblast apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of stem cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cellular senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IINuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of glucose metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of steroid metabolic processNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
intracellular receptor signaling pathwayNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
circadian regulation of gene expressionNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to sterolNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of circadian rhythmNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of fat cell differentiationNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
adipose tissue developmentNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
T-helper 17 cell differentiationNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IINuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
cell population proliferationATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of B cell proliferationATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear DNA replicationATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
signal transduction in response to DNA damageATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
isotype switchingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA replicationATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of isotype switching to IgG isotypesATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
DNA clamp unloadingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of mitotic cell cycle phase transitionATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell cycle G2/M phase transitionATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of receptor internalizationAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of translationAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
RNA metabolic processAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
P-body assemblyAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
stress granule assemblyAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
RNA transportAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Molecular Functions (44)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
transcription cis-regulatory region bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
core promoter sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
TFIID-class transcription factor complex bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription repressor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription activator activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protease bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
p53 bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromatin bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mRNA 3'-UTR bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
copper ion bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
enzyme bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
receptor tyrosine kinase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ubiquitin protein ligase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
histone deacetylase regulator activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ATP-dependent DNA/DNA annealing activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
histone deacetylase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein heterodimerization activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-folding chaperone bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein phosphatase 2A bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II-specific DNA-binding transcription factor bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
14-3-3 protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
MDM2/MDM4 family protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
disordered domain specific bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
general transcription initiation factor bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
molecular function activator activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
promoter-specific chromatin bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription repressor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
oxysterol bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
ligand-activated transcription factor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
sequence-specific double-stranded DNA bindingNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nuclear receptor activityNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
ATP bindingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
ATP hydrolysis activityATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
DNA clamp unloader activityATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
DNA bindingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
RNA bindingAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
epidermal growth factor receptor bindingAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
mRNA bindingAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Ceullar Components (27)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
nuclear bodyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
replication forkCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleolusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial matrixCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
centrosomeCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear matrixCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
PML bodyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription repressor complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
site of double-strand breakCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
germ cell nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromatinCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription regulator complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneGlutamate receptor 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)
nucleusNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nuclear bodyNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
chromatinNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
nucleusNuclear receptor ROR-gammaHomo sapiens (human)
Elg1 RFC-like complexATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
Golgi apparatusAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
trans-Golgi networkAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmic stress granuleAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
membraneAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
perinuclear region of cytoplasmAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
ribonucleoprotein complexAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmic stress granuleAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Research

Studies (634)

TimeframeStudies, This Drug (%)All Drugs %
pre-1990177 (27.92)18.7374
1990's120 (18.93)18.2507
2000's149 (23.50)29.6817
2010's174 (27.44)24.3611
2020's14 (2.21)2.80
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Study Types

Publication TypeThis drug (%)All Drugs (%)
Trials0 (0.00%)5.53%
Reviews3 (0.44%)6.00%
Case Studies0 (0.00%)4.05%
Observational0 (0.00%)0.25%
Other677 (99.56%)84.16%
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]