| OXGR1 |
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| Identifiers |
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| Aliases | OXGR1, GPR80, GPR99, P2RY15, P2Y15, aKGR, oxoglutarate receptor 1 |
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| External IDs | OMIM: 606922; MGI: 2685145; HomoloGene: 25878; GeneCards: OXGR1; OMA:OXGR1 - orthologs |
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| Gene location (Mouse) |
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| | Chr. | Chromosome 14 (mouse) |
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| | Band | 14|14 E4 | Start | 120,256,997 bp |
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| End | 120,279,847 bp |
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| Wikidata |
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OXGR1, i.e., 2-oxoglutarate receptor 1 (also known as GPR99, cysteinyl leukotriene receptor E, i.e., CysLTE, and cysteinyl leukotriene receptor 3, i.e., CysLT3) is a G protein-coupled receptor located on the surface membranes of certain cells. It functions by binding one of its ligands and thereby becoming active in triggering pre-programmed responses in its parent cells. OXGR1 has been shown to be activated by α-ketoglutarate, itaconate, and three cysteinyl-containing leukotrienes (abbreviated as CysLTs), leukotriene E4 (i.e., LTE4), LTC4, and LTD4. α-Ketoglutarate and itaconate are the dianionic forms of α-ketoglutaric acid and itaconic acid, respectively. α-Ketoglutaric and itaconic acids are short-chain dicarboxylic acids that have two carboxyl groups (notated as -CO2H) both of which are bound to hydrogen (i.e., H+). However, at the basic pH levels (i.e., pH>7) in virtually all animal tissues, α-ketoglutaric acid and itaconic acid exit almost exclusively as α-ketoglutarate and itaconate, i.e., with their carboxy residues being negatively charged (notated as -CO2
), because they are not bound to H+ (see Conjugate acid-base theory). It is α-ketoglutarate and itaconate, not α-ketoglutaric or itaconic acids, which activate OXGR1.