RPS10 Back

ribosomal protein S10

External References:      Wikipedia GeneCards HUGO COSMIC Google Scholar

NCBI Description of RPS10

Ribosomes, the organelles that catalyze protein synthesis, consist of a small 40S subunit and a large 60S subunit. Together these subunits are composed of 4 RNA species and approximately 80 structurally distinct proteins. This gene encodes a ribosomal protein that is a component of the 40S subunit. The protein belongs to the S10E family of ribosomal proteins. It is located in the cytoplasm. Variable expression of this gene in colorectal cancers compared to adjacent normal tissues has been observed, although no correlation between the level of expression and the severity of the disease has been found. As is typical for genes encoding ribosomal proteins, there are multiple processed pseudogenes of this gene dispersed through the genome. Alternate splicing results in multiple transcript variants that encode the same protein. Naturally occurring read-through transcription occurs between this locus and the neighboring locus NUDT3 (nudix (nucleoside diphosphate linked moiety X)-type motif 3).

Community Annotation of RPS10 Add / Edit RPS10: Annotations

No community annotations yet for RPS10.
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

RPS10 is highly significantly mutated in
(none)
RPS10 is significantly mutated in
(none)
RPS10 is near significance in
(none)

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

Data details


Mutation list for RPS10