Erythropoietin receptor

The erythropoietin receptor (EpoR) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the EPOR gene. EpoR is a 52kDa peptide with a single carbohydrate chain resulting in an approximately 56-57 kDa protein found on the surface of EPO responding cells. It is a member of the cytokine receptor family. EpoR pre-exists as dimers. These dimers were originally thought to be formed by extracellular domain interactions, however, it is now assumed that it is formed by interactions of the transmembrane domain and that the original structure of the extracellular interaction site was due to crystallisation conditions and does not depict the native conformation. Binding of a 30 kDa ligand erythropoietin (Epo), changes the receptor's conformational change, resulting in the autophosphorylation of Jak2 kinases that are pre-associated with the receptor (i.e., EpoR does not possess intrinsic kinase activity and depends on Jak2 activity). At present, the best-established function of EpoR is to promote proliferation and rescue of erythroid (red blood cell) progenitors from apoptosis.

EPOR
Available structures
PDBOrtholog search: PDBe RCSB
Identifiers
AliasesEPOR, EPO-R, erythropoietin receptor
External IDsOMIM: 133171 MGI: 95408 HomoloGene: 95 GeneCards: EPOR
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez

2057

13857

Ensembl

ENSG00000187266

ENSMUSG00000006235

UniProt

P19235

P14753

RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_000121

NM_010149

RefSeq (protein)

NP_000112

NP_034279

Location (UCSC)Chr 19: 11.38 – 11.38 MbChr 9: 21.87 – 21.87 Mb
PubMed search
Wikidata
View/Edit HumanView/Edit Mouse
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