S100 calcium-binding protein A11 (S100A11) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the S100A11 gene.
The protein encoded by this gene is a member of the S100 family of proteins containing 2 EF-hand calcium-binding motifs. S100 proteins are localized in the cytoplasm and/or nucleus of a wide range of cells, and involved in the regulation of a number of cellular processes such as cell cycle progression and differentiation. S100 genes include at least 13 members which are located as a cluster on chromosome 1q21. This protein may function in motility, invasion, and tubulin polymerization. Chromosomal rearrangements and altered expression of this gene have been implicated in tumor metastasis. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008].
via MyGene.info
S100 calcium-binding protein A11 (S100A11) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the S100A11 gene.
== Function == The protein encoded by this gene is a member of the S100 family of proteins containing 2 EF-hand calcium-binding motifs. S100A11, also known as calgizzarin or 100C, is a small acidic protein. Along with all 13 members of the S100 family, are located as a cluster on chromosome 1q21. It was first found in 1989, and later isolated from chicken gizzard muscles.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).