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This section gives an overview of the disease, and where available shows the following:
More information can be found in the help pages.
✖Disease ID: | 189 | |
Name: | Cardiovascular disease | |
Associated with: | 2 targets |
Click on the target name to link to its detailed view page
Where available, information is display on the role of the target in the disease; drugs which target the disease and their therapeutic use and side-effects.
If there is mutation data curated in GtoPdb this is indicated, with a link back to the appropriate section on the target detailed view page
Immuno ligand interactions - If available, a table of immuno-relevant ligands is shown. These ligands have been curated as having an association to the disease and possess interaction data with the target in GtoPdb. The approval status of the ligand is shown, along with curator comments and an indication of whether the target is considered the primary target of the ligand.
More information can be found in the help pages.
✖FPR2 | |
Mutations: | FPR2 is associated with 1 mutation. Click here for details |
regulator of G-protein signaling 6 | |
Comments: | Doxorubicin and alcohol mediated cardiomyopathy. |
References: | 2-3 |
Click ligand name to view ligand summary page
Click the arrow in the final column to expand comments
More information can be found in the help pages.
✖No ligand related data available for Cardiovascular disease
1. Simiele F, Recchiuti A, Mattoscio D, De Luca A, Cianci E, Franchi S, Gatta V, Parolari A, Werba JP, Camera M et al.. (2012) Transcriptional regulation of the human FPR2/ALX gene: evidence of a heritable genetic variant that impairs promoter activity. FASEB J, 26 (3): 1323-33. [PMID:22131270]
2. Stewart A, Maity B, Anderegg SP, Allamargot C, Yang J, Fisher RA. (2015) Regulator of G protein signaling 6 is a critical mediator of both reward-related behavioral and pathological responses to alcohol. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 112 (7): E786-95. [PMID:25646431]
3. Yang J, Maity B, Huang J, Gao Z, Stewart A, Weiss RM, Anderson ME, Fisher RA. (2013) G-protein inactivator RGS6 mediates myocardial cell apoptosis and cardiomyopathy caused by doxorubicin. Cancer Res, 73 (6): 1662-7. [PMID:23338613]