Basic Information
Gene ID
FRAEX38873_v2_000088420
Position
Contig1966:39262-41175 (-)
1913bp
Gene Type
gene
Gene Description (Protein Product)
EF-hand domain
Organism
Also AS AT1G32250

Gene Structure

upstream:

Domain
Database EntryID E-Value Start end InterPro ID Description

Regulation&Interaction
Protein-protein interaction (PPI)
FRAEX38873_v2_000277380 Sodium hydrogen exchanger
FRAEX38873_v2_000398350 Belongs to the monovalent cation proton antiporter 1 (CPA1) transporter (TC 2.A.36) family
Regulatory gene
FRAEX38873_v2_000000110 GAGA binding protein-like family
FRAEX38873_v2_000001190 Stress-associated protein
FRAEX38873_v2_000002120 B3 DNA binding domain

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Annotation

Orthologous Group
Orthologous ID Species Number All hits in PereRegDB Hits of this species Orthologous Detail

Expression Profile
DataSet Number of Samples expressed(TPM>1) Mean Min Max Standard deviation(SD) Coeffcient variation(CV)


Pathway
GO Term Description GO Category
GO:0003674 molecular_function MF
GO:0005488 binding MF
GO:0005509 calcium ion binding MF
GO:0043167 ion binding MF
GO:0043169 cation binding MF
GO:0046872 metal ion binding MF
KEGG Term Name Description
map04626 Plant-pathogen interaction Plants lack animal-like adaptive immunity mechanisms, and therefore have evolved a specific system with multiple layers against invading pathogens. The primary response includes the perception of pathogens by cell-surface pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs) and is referred to as PAMP-triggered immunity (PTI). Activation of FLS2 and EFR triggers MAPK signaling pathway that activates defense genes for antimictobial compounds. The increase in the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration is also a regulator for production of reactive oxygen species and localized programmed cell death/hypersensitive response. The secondary response is called effector-triggered immunity (ETI). Pathogens can acquire the ability to suppress PTI by directly injecting effector proteins into the plant cell through secretion systems. In addition, pathogens can manipulate plant hormone signaling pathways to evade host immune responses using coronatine toxin. Some plants possess specific intracellular surveillance proteins (R proteins) to monitor the presence of pathogen virulence proteins. This ETI occurs with localized programmed cell death to arrest pathogen growth, resulting in cultivar-specific disease resistance.