Trem-like transcript 1 protein is a protein that in humans is encoded by the TREML1 gene.
This gene encodes a member of the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-like (TREM) family. The encoded protein is a type 1 single Ig domain orphan receptor localized to the alpha-granule membranes of platelets. The encoded protein is involved in platelet aggregation, inflammation, and cellular activation and has been linked to Gray platelet syndrome. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants [provided by RefSeq, Nov 2012].
via MyGene.info
Trem-like transcript 1 protein is a protein that in humans is encoded by the TREML1 gene.
TREML1 is located in a gene cluster on chromosome 6 with the single Ig variable (IgV) domain activating receptors TREM1 (MIM 605085) and TREM2 (MIM 605086), but it has distinct structural and functional properties.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).