Variant ID | 18769 |
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Entrez Gene ID | 2562 |
Gene | GABRB3 (GeneCards) |
Location | hg19 15:26869600-26869600
hg38 15:26624453-26624453 |
Disease | Asymptomatic |
Method | HiSeq X Ten |
Mutation(HGVS format) | NC_000015.9:g.26869600 C>T (Genome Assembly: GRCh37) |
Exon or Intron | NA |
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Position in protein | NA |
Amino acid changes in protein | NA > NA |
Position in cDNA | NA |
Changes in cDNA | NA > NA |
mRNA accession | NA |
mRNA length | NA |
Reference length | 102531392 |
MAF in gnomAD genome (version 2.0.1) | 0 |
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EIGEN score | -0.0313 |
CADD Raw score (version 1.3) | 0.171487 (Deleterious) |
FATHMM raw prediction score | 0.16224 (Tolerated) |
Deleterious probability by DeFine | 0.7654 (Deleterious) |
Entrez Gene ID | 2562 (NCBI Gene) |
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Official Gene Symbol | GABRB3 (GeneCards) |
Number of variants in GABRB3 in this database | 3 (view all the variants) |
Full name | gamma-aminobutyric acid type A receptor beta3 subunit |
Band | 15q12 |
Other IDs | Vega: OTTHUMG00000129231 OMIM: 137192 HGNC: HGNC:4083 Ensembl: ENSG00000166206 |
Other names | ECA5, EIEE43 |
Summary | This gene encodes a member of the ligand-gated ionic channel family. The encoded protein is one the subunits of a multi-subunit chloride channel that serves as the receptor for gamma-aminobutyric acid, a major inhibitory neurotransmitter of the mammalian nervous system. This gene is located on the long arm of chromosome 15 in a cluster with two other genes encoding related subunits of the family. This gene may be associated with the pathogenesis of several disorders including Angelman syndrome, Prader-Willi syndrome, nonsyndromic orofacial clefts, epilepsy and autism. Alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding distinct isoforms have been described. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2013] |
Individual ID | 29217584.03 (view all the variants in this individual) |
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Pubmed ID | 29217584 |
Whose mosaic mutation | Normal |
Phenotype | 1 |
Disease | Asymptomatic |
OMIM ID |
Pubmed ID | 29217584 |
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Title | Aging and neurodegeneration are associated with increased mutations in single human neurons. |
Journal | Science |
Publication date | 2018.02 |
Disease | Cockayne syndrome Xeroderma Pigmentosum |
Number of cases | Male cases: 3; Female cases: 6; cases of unknown sex: 15; |