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I-FABP / FABP2

fatty acid binding protein 2, intestinal

The intracellular fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) belong to a multigene family with nearly twenty identified members. FABPs are divided into at least three distinct types, namely the hepatic-, intestinal- and cardiac-type. They form 14-15 kDa proteins and are thought to participate in the uptake, intracellular metabolism and/or transport of long-chain fatty acids. They may also be responsible in the modulation of cell growth and proliferation. Intestinal fatty acid-binding protein 2 gene contains four exons and is an abundant cytosolic protein in small intestine epithelial cells. This gene has a polymorphism at codon 54 that identified an alanine-encoding allele and a threonine-encoding allele. Thr-54 protein is associated with increased fat oxidation and insulin resistance.

Gene Name: fatty acid binding protein 2, intestinal
Synonyms: FABP2, FABPI, Fatty acid-binding protein 2, I-FABP
Target Sequences: M18079 AAA52417.1 P12104

Publications (2)

1
Protected graft copolymer-formulated fibroblast growth factors mitigate the lethality of partial body irradiation injury. Gerardo M Castillo, Akiko Nishimoto-Ashfield, Cynthia C Jones, Kasim K Kabirov, Alexander Zakharov, Alexander V Lyubimov. PloS one. 2017 February;12:e0171703. [Full Text Article] [PubMed:28207794] [PMC:PMC5313194]
2
Zinc Exposure Promotes Commensal-to-Pathogen Transition in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Leading to Mucosal Inflammation and Illness in Mice. Tong Wu, Annie Gagnon, Katherine McGourty, Rebecca DosSantos, Lucia Chanetsa, Boce Zhang, Dhimiter Bello, Shannon L Kelleher. International journal of molecular sciences. 2021 December;22: [Full Text Article] [PubMed:34948118] [PMC:PMC8705841]

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PLEASE NOTE

For RESEARCH USE ONLY. Intended for use by laboratory professionals. Not intended for human diagnostic or therapeutic purposes.

The data on this page has been compiled from LifeSpan internal sources, the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), and The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt).