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98878 Ensembl ENSG00000103966 ENSMUSG00000027293 UniProt Q9H223 Q9EQP2 RefSeq (mRNA) NM_139265 NM_133838 RefSeq (protein) NP_644670 NP_598599 Location (UCSC) Chr 15: 41.9 – 41.97 Mb Chr 2: 119.92 – 119.99 Mb PubMed search Wikidata View/Edit Human View/Edit Mouse EH-domain containing 4, also known as EHD4, is a human gene belonging to the EHD protein family. References ^ a b c GRCh38 ...
The ATP binding domain shows impressive structural and functional similarity to the Dynamin GTP binding domain which is known to facilitate clathrin-coated vesicle budding. Given this resemblance, several researchers tend to consider the EHD protein family a sub-group that falls within the Dynamin protein superfamily. When ATP binds to this ...
In complex analysis, a complex domain (or simply domain) is any connected open subset of the complex plane C. For example, the entire complex plane is a domain, as is the open unit disk, the open upper half-plane, and so forth. Often, a complex domain serves as the domain of definition for a holomorphic function.
In mathematics, the domain of a function is the set of inputs accepted by the function. It is sometimes denoted by or , where f is the function. In layman's terms, the domain of a function can generally be thought of as "what x can be". [1]
Smoothness is a concept which mathematics has endowed with many meanings, from simple differentiability to infinite differentiability to analyticity, and still others which are more complicated. Each such usage attempts to invoke the physically intuitive notion of smoothness. strong, stronger
The difficulty of determining the domain of definition of a complex function is illustrated by the multiplicative inverse of the Riemann zeta function: the determination of the domain of definition of the function / is more or less equivalent to the proof or disproof of one of the major open problems in mathematics, the Riemann hypothesis.
EH domain-containing protein N-terminal, between the 24th and 56th amino acid. This is a short domain that can be found at the beginning of a protein, also known as N-terminus, of many dynamins and EF-hand domain-containing proteins. [3] Dynamin-type guanine nucleotide-binding (G) domain, between the 56th and 286th
A codomain is part of a function f if f is defined as a triple (X, Y, G) where X is called the domain of f, Y its codomain, and G its graph. [1] The set of all elements of the form f(x), where x ranges over the elements of the domain X, is called the image of f. The image of a function is a subset of its codomain so it might not coincide with it.