Kininostatin |
Kinocidins |
KTRNWFSEHFKKVKEKLKDTFA |
||
The term kinin has been used as a collective term to designate polypeptides generated or released from stores in the blood or in tissues that are pharmacologically active on the smooth muscle and alter arterial tension. The term usually pertains to bioactive short peptides encoded by Kininogens. These peptides are short-lived mediators but they have been implicated in numerous physiological and pathophysiological processes (note that the general term kinin or leukokinin is being used also for a larger family of invertebrate peptides with myotropic and diuretic activity that are unrelated to kininogen parent proteins (for overview see: Torfs et al, 1999).
Kinin peptides are liberated from the precursor protein by proteolytic digestion, involving, for example, tissue and
... ... ... ...
... CONTINUE READING at cells-talk.com,
COPE's new home with 61 100+ entries, 141 552 cited references and >2,5
million internal hyperlinks. This most comprehensive knowledge base provides
extensive in-context information covering nomenclature, terminology, and
highlighting concepts, strategies & complexities of cellular communication
processes. COPE's fully integrated subdictionaries include
Dictionary of Angiogenesis •
Dictionary of Antimicrobial & host defense peptides •
Dictionary of Apoptosis and cell death •
Dictionary of CD antigens •
Dictionary of Chemokines •
Dictionary of Cryptides •
Dictionary of Cytokines & Growth factors •
Dictionary of Eukaryotic cell types & expression profiles •
Dictionary of Hematopoiesis •
Dictionary of Hormones •
Dictionary of Inflamation & inflammatory mediators •
Dictionary of Innate Immunity •
Dictionary of Metalloproteinases •
Dictionary of Moonlighting proteins & cryptides •
Dictionary of Neuropeptides •
Dictionary of Pathogenicity & Virulence Factors •
Dictionary of Pattern recognition receptors •
Dictionary of Protein domains •
Dictionary of Regulatory peptide factors •
Dictionary of Viroceptors •
Dictionary of Virokines •
Dictionary of Stem cells
and more.
An important note about your privacy: A search engine may have brought
you here. If the provided URL differs in any way from
"www.copewithcytokines.org/cope.cgi?key=search term", 3rd parties may
record your activities on COPE. Bypass snoopers by doing this: Go
directly to cells-talk.com or go to
copewithcytokines.org
in a new browser tab and from there explore whether COPE contains the terms
that interest you. The private bioinformatics initiative COPE at
cells-talk.com
never shares your search histories or user databank entry with 3rd parties.
| SUPPORT COPE | Intro | Subdictionaries | New Entries | Contribute data | COPE Credentials |
| # | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |
|
Created, developed, and maintained by Dr H Ibelgaufts
|
U L T R A P O S S E N E M O O B L I G A T U R