CXCL11 Back

chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 11

External References:      Wikipedia GeneCards HUGO COSMIC Google Scholar

NCBI Description of CXCL11

Chemokines are a group of small (approximately 8 to 14 kD), mostly basic, structurally related molecules that regulate cell trafficking of various types of leukocytes through interactions with a subset of 7-transmembrane, G protein-coupled receptors. Chemokines also play fundamental roles in the development, homeostasis, and function of the immune system, and they have effects on cells of the central nervous system as well as on endothelial cells involved in angiogenesis or angiostasis. Chemokines are divided into 2 major subfamilies, CXC and CC. This gene is a CXC member of the chemokine superfamily. Its encoded protein induces a chemotactic response in activated T-cells and is the dominant ligand for CXC receptor-3. The gene encoding this protein contains 4 exons and at least three polyadenylation signals which might reflect cell-specific regulation of expression. IFN-gamma is a potent inducer of transcription of this gene.

Community Annotation of CXCL11 Add / Edit CXCL11: Annotations

No community annotations yet for CXCL11.
Sort mutations by: Tumor type  Mutation type  Position  
Straightedge cursor Expand

Figure notes


• "Mouse over" a mutation to see details.
• Missense green saturation indicates evolutionary conservation of the mutated positions.
• Red hashes in protein strip are splice sites.
• Blue-white-red bars are log2 copy ratio distributions (–1 to +1) from Zack et al. (2013).


Legend

CXCL11 is highly significantly mutated in
(none)
CXCL11 is significantly mutated in
(none)
CXCL11 is near significance in
(none)

Click on a tumor type to see its full list of significant genes.

Data details


Mutation list for CXCL11