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IL5

interleukin 5 (colony-stimulating factor, eosinophil)

IL5 is a cytokine that acts as a growth and differentiation factor for both B cells and eosinophils. The encoded cytokine plays a major role in the regulation of eosinophil formation, maturation, recruitment and survival. The increased production of this cytokine may be related to pathogenesis of eosinophil-dependent inflammatory diseases. This cytokine functions by binding to its receptor, which is a heterodimer, whose beta subunit is shared with the receptors for interleukine 3 (IL3) and colony stimulating factor 2 (CSF2/GM-CSF). This gene is located on chromosome 5 within a cytokine gene cluster which includes interleukin 4 (IL4), interleukin 13 (IL13), and CSF2 . This gene, IL4, and IL13 may be regulated coordinately by long-range regulatory elements spread over 120 kilobases on chromosome 5q31.

Gene Name: interleukin 5 (colony-stimulating factor, eosinophil)
Family/Subfamily: Hormone , not assigned-Hormone
Synonyms: IL5, EDF, Interleukin-5, IL-5, T-cell replacing factor, TRF
Target Sequences: NM_000879 NP_000870.1 P05113

Publications (1)

1
The Chronic Stages of Bovine Fasciola hepatica Are Dominated by CD4 T-Cell Exhaustion. Sachdev D, Gough KC, Flynn RJ. Frontiers in immunology. 2017 August;8:1002. [Full Text Article] [PubMed:28871261] [PMC:PMC5566560]

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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).