hg38 CCDS Gene
 

Consensus CDS Gene CCDS33030.1

GeneRAB4B
Descriptionras-related protein Rab-4B
SequencesCDS,  protein,  genomic
CCDS database CCDS33030.1

Associated Sequences

 mRNAProtein
UCSC GenesENST00000357052.8 
ENST00000594136.2 
ENST00000594800.5 
RefSeqNM_016154.4 NP_057238.3
VegaOTTHUMT00000463168 OTTHUMP00000269901
OTTHUMT00000463210 OTTHUMP00000269928
OTTHUMT00000464583 OTTHUMP00000270629
EnsemblENST00000357052 ENSP00000349560
ENST00000594136 ENSP00000469872
ENST00000594800 ENSP00000470246
MGCBC033081 
BC046927 

Note: mRNA and protein sequences in other gene collections may differ from the CCDS sequences.


RefSeq summary of CCDS33030.1

RAB proteins, such as RAB4B, are members of the RAS superfamily of small GTPases that are involved in vesicular trafficking (He et al., 2002 [PubMed 12450215]).[supplied by OMIM, Aug 2009].


Data schema/format description and download

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Data last updated at UCSC: 2019-10-03

Description

This track shows human genome high-confidence gene annotations from the Consensus Coding Sequence (CCDS) project. This project is a collaborative effort to identify a core set of human protein-coding regions that are consistently annotated and of high quality. The long-term goal is to support convergence towards a standard set of gene annotations on the human genome.

Collaborators include:

For more information on the different gene tracks, see our Genes FAQ.

Methods

CDS annotations of the human genome were obtained from two sources: NCBI RefSeq and a union of the gene annotations from Ensembl and Vega, collectively known as Hinxton.

Genes with identical CDS genomic coordinates in both sets become CCDS candidates. The genes undergo a quality evaluation, which must be approved by all collaborators. The following criteria are currently used to assess each gene:

  • an initiating ATG (Exception: a non-ATG translation start codon is annotated if it has sufficient experimental support), a valid stop codon, and no in-frame stop codons (Exception: selenoproteins, which contain a TGA codon that is known to be translated to a selenocysteine instead of functioning as a stop codon)
  • ability to be translated from the genome reference sequence without frameshifts
  • recognizable splicing sites
  • no intersection with putative pseudogene predictions
  • supporting transcripts and protein homology
  • conservation evidence with other species

A unique CCDS ID is assigned to the CCDS, which links together all gene annotations with the same CDS. CCDS gene annotations are under continuous review, with periodic updates to this track.

Credits

This track was produced at UCSC from data downloaded from the CCDS project web site.

References

Hubbard T, Barker D, Birney E, Cameron G, Chen Y, Clark L, Cox T, Cuff J, Curwen V, Down T et al. The Ensembl genome database project. Nucleic Acids Res. 2002 Jan 1;30(1):38-41. PMID: 11752248; PMC: PMC99161

Pruitt KD, Harrow J, Harte RA, Wallin C, Diekhans M, Maglott DR, Searle S, Farrell CM, Loveland JE, Ruef BJ et al. The consensus coding sequence (CCDS) project: Identifying a common protein-coding gene set for the human and mouse genomes. Genome Res. 2009 Jul;19(7):1316-23. PMID: 19498102; PMC: PMC2704439

Pruitt KD, Tatusova T, Maglott DR. NCBI Reference Sequence (RefSeq): a curated non-redundant sequence database of genomes, transcripts and proteins. Nucleic Acids Res. 2005 Jan 1;33(Database issue):D501-4. PMID: 15608248; PMC: PMC539979