FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
Gene: Dmel\αTub67C
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General Information
Symbol
Dmel\αTub67C
Species
D. melanogaster
Name
α-Tubulin at 67C
Annotation Symbol
CG8308
Feature Type
FlyBase ID
FBgn0087040
Gene Model Status
Stock Availability
Gene Summary
α-Tubulin at 67C (αTub67C) encodes a protein that form heterodimers with β-tubulins to polymerise and form microtubules. Tubulin molecules containing the product of αTub67C are essential for fast growth of the microtubules during the initial cleavage divisions of embryogenesis. [Date last reviewed: 2019-03-21] (FlyBase Gene Snapshot)
Also Known As

α-tubulin, tubulin, α4-tubulin, α-Tub, α-Tub67C

Key Links
Genomic Location
Cytogenetic map
Sequence location
Recombination map
3-31
RefSeq locus
NT_037436 REGION:9681268..9683370
Sequence
Genomic Maps
Other Genome Views
The following external sites may use different assemblies or annotations than FlyBase.
Function
Gene Ontology (GO) Annotations (21 terms)
Molecular Function (2 terms)
Terms Based on Experimental Evidence (0 terms)
Terms Based on Predictions or Assertions (2 terms)
CV Term
Evidence
References
enables GTP binding
inferred from biological aspect of ancestor with PANTHER:PTN000172598
inferred from biological aspect of ancestor with PANTHER:PTN000172598
inferred from electronic annotation with InterPro:IPR002452
Biological Process (13 terms)
Terms Based on Experimental Evidence (10 terms)
CV Term
Evidence
References
inferred from mutant phenotype
involved_in embryonic cleavage
inferred from mutant phenotype
inferred from mutant phenotype
inferred from mutant phenotype
involved_in mRNA transport
inferred from mutant phenotype
involved_in nuclear division
inferred from mutant phenotype
inferred from mutant phenotype
inferred from mutant phenotype
inferred from mutant phenotype
Terms Based on Predictions or Assertions (3 terms)
CV Term
Evidence
References
inferred from biological aspect of ancestor with PANTHER:PTN000172598
involved_in mitotic cell cycle
inferred from biological aspect of ancestor with PANTHER:PTN000172598
Cellular Component (6 terms)
Terms Based on Experimental Evidence (5 terms)
CV Term
Evidence
References
inferred from direct assay
located_in cytoplasm
inferred from high throughput direct assay
located_in nucleus
inferred from high throughput direct assay
inferred from direct assay
located_in plasma membrane
inferred from high throughput direct assay
Terms Based on Predictions or Assertions (2 terms)
CV Term
Evidence
References
is_active_in cytoplasm
inferred from biological aspect of ancestor with PANTHER:PTN000172598
is_active_in microtubule
inferred from biological aspect of ancestor with PANTHER:PTN000172598
Gene Group (FlyBase)
Protein Family (UniProt)
Belongs to the tubulin family. (P06606)
Summaries
Gene Snapshot
α-Tubulin at 67C (αTub67C) encodes a protein that form heterodimers with β-tubulins to polymerise and form microtubules. Tubulin molecules containing the product of αTub67C are essential for fast growth of the microtubules during the initial cleavage divisions of embryogenesis. [Date last reviewed: 2019-03-21]
Gene Group (FlyBase)
ALPHA TUBULINS -
Tubulins are cytoskeletal proteins. α- and β-tubulin heterodimers polymerise to form microtubules, the roles of which include mechanical strength, intracellular trafficking and chromosome segregation. (Adapted from PMID:1121746).
Protein Function (UniProtKB)
Tubulin is the major constituent of microtubules, a cylinder consisting of laterally associated linear protofilaments composed of alpha- and beta-tubulin heterodimers. Microtubules grow by the addition of GTP-tubulin dimers to the microtubule end, where a stabilizing cap forms. Below the cap, tubulin dimers are in GDP-bound state, owing to GTPase activity of alpha-tubulin.
(UniProt, P06606)
Phenotypic Description (Red Book; Lindsley and Zimm 1992)
αTub67C (α4t)
A structural gene for α-Tubulin. It is transcribed into mRNA that is maternal in origin and is synthesized in the nurse cells; the transcript accumulates in 0- to 3-hr embryos and adult ovaries (Kalfayan and Wensink, 1982; Matthews et al., 1989). The protein is clearly different from the other α-Tubulins of Drosophila melanogaster as well as from those of other animal species. A stable pool of α67C tubulin is found in ovaries, unfertilized eggs, and embryos, but synthesis of the protein probably only occurs in the ovary (Matthews et al., 1989).
Gene Model and Products
Number of Transcripts
1
Number of Unique Polypeptides
1

Please see the JBrowse view of Dmel\αTub67C for information on other features

To submit a correction to a gene model please use the Contact FlyBase form

Protein Domains (via Pfam)
Isoform displayed:
Pfam protein domains
InterPro name
classification
start
end
Protein Domains (via SMART)
Isoform displayed:
SMART protein domains
InterPro name
classification
start
end
Structure
Protein 3D structure   (Predicted by AlphaFold)   (AlphaFold entry P06606)

If you don't see a structure in the viewer, refresh your browser.
Model Confidence:
  • Very high (pLDDT > 90)
  • Confident (90 > pLDDT > 70)
  • Low (70 > pLDDT > 50)
  • Very low (pLDDT < 50)

AlphaFold produces a per-residue confidence score (pLDDT) between 0 and 100. Some regions with low pLDDT may be unstructured in isolation.

Experimentally Determined Structures
Crossreferences
Comments on Gene Model

Gene model reviewed during 5.43

Gene model reviewed during 5.46

Gene model reviewed during 5.55

Transcript Data
Annotated Transcripts
Name
FlyBase ID
RefSeq ID
Length (nt)
Assoc. CDS (aa)
FBtr0076393
1617
462
Additional Transcript Data and Comments
Reported size (kB)

1.5 (northern blot)

2.043 (sequence analysis)

1.8 (northern blot)

1.3 (unknown)

1.7 (northern blot)

Comments
External Data
Crossreferences
Polypeptide Data
Annotated Polypeptides
Name
FlyBase ID
Predicted MW (kDa)
Length (aa)
Theoretical pI
UniProt
RefSeq ID
GenBank
Polypeptides with Identical Sequences

There is only one protein coding transcript and one polypeptide associated with this gene

Additional Polypeptide Data and Comments
Reported size (kDa)

462 (aa); 55 (kD predicted)

Comments

The location of maternal and constitutive

α-tubulins is indistinguishable until ~8 hrs of development as determined

by staining with maternal α-tubulin-specific and general α-tubulin

antibodies.

External Data
Subunit Structure (UniProtKB)

Dimer of alpha and beta chains. A typical microtubule is a hollow water-filled tube with an outer diameter of 25 nm and an inner diameter of 15 nM. Alpha-beta heterodimers associate head-to-tail to form protofilaments running lengthwise along the microtubule wall with the beta-tubulin subunit facing the microtubule plus end conferring a structural polarity. Microtubules usually have 13 protofilaments but different protofilament numbers can be found in some organisms and specialized cells.

(UniProt, P06606)
Linkouts
Sequences Consistent with the Gene Model
Mapped Features

Click to get a list of regulatory features (enhancers, TFBS, etc.) and gene disruptions (point mutations, indels, etc.) within or overlapping Dmel\αTub67C using the Feature Mapper tool.

External Data
Crossreferences
Eukaryotic Promoter Database - A collection of databases of experimentally validated promoters for selected model organisms.
Linkouts
Expression Data
Testis-specificity index

The testis specificity index was calculated from modENCODE tissue expression data by Vedelek et al., 2018 to indicate the degree of testis enrichment compared to other tissues. Scores range from -2.52 (underrepresented) to 5.2 (very high testis bias).

-0.30

Transcript Expression
in situ
Stage
Tissue/Position (including subcellular localization)
Reference
organism

Comment: maternally deposited

northern blot
Stage
Tissue/Position (including subcellular localization)
Reference

Comment: reference states 0-12 hr AEL

Additional Descriptive Data
Marker for
 
Subcellular Localization
CV Term
Polypeptide Expression
No Assay Recorded
Stage
Tissue/Position (including subcellular localization)
Reference
immunolocalization
Stage
Tissue/Position (including subcellular localization)
Reference
western blot
Stage
Tissue/Position (including subcellular localization)
Reference
Additional Descriptive Data

αTub67C protein is most abundant in early embryos. Levels decline between 6 and 9 hours and it is nearly undetectable after 18hr. By 8hrs, maternal tubulin has diminished in most cells of the embryo but is retained in the ventral midline. At 15hrs, staining occurs only in a single pair of connective fibers on either side of the midline.

To compare synthesis and accumulation of α-tubulin proteins, 35S</up>methionine radiolabeled tissues were subjected to Western analysis using monoclonal anti-α-tubulin antibody. A stable pool of αTub67C protein was detected in ovaries, unfertilized eggs, and embryos, but synthesis was detected only in ovaries.

Marker for
 
Subcellular Localization
CV Term
Evidence
References
inferred from direct assay
located_in cytoplasm
inferred from high throughput direct assay
located_in nucleus
inferred from high throughput direct assay
inferred from direct assay
located_in plasma membrane
inferred from high throughput direct assay
Expression Deduced from Reporters
High-Throughput Expression Data
Associated Tools

JBrowse - Visual display of RNA-Seq signals

View Dmel\αTub67C in JBrowse
RNA-Seq by Region - Search RNA-Seq expression levels by exon or genomic region
Reference
See Gelbart and Emmert, 2013 for analysis details and data files for all genes.
Developmental Proteome: Life Cycle
Developmental Proteome: Embryogenesis
External Data and Images
Linkouts
BDGP expression data - Patterns of gene expression in Drosophila embryogenesis
DRscDB - A single-cell RNA-seq resource for data mining and data comparison across species
EMBL-EBI Single Cell Expression Atlas - Single cell expression across species
FlyAtlas2 - A Drosophila melanogaster expression atlas with RNA-Seq, miRNA-Seq and sex-specific data
Fly-FISH - A database of Drosophila embryo and larvae mRNA localization patterns
Flygut - An atlas of the Drosophila adult midgut
Images
  • Stages(s) 4-6
  • Stages(s) 9-10
  • Stages(s) 11-12
  • Stages(s) 13-16
Alleles, Insertions, Transgenic Constructs, and Aberrations
Classical and Insertion Alleles ( 29 )
For All Classical and Insertion Alleles Show
 
Other relevant insertions
Transgenic Constructs ( 13 )
For All Alleles Carried on Transgenic Constructs Show
Transgenic constructs containing/affecting coding region of αTub67C
Transgenic constructs containing regulatory region of αTub67C
Aberrations (Deficiencies and Duplications) ( 10 )
Variants
Variant Molecular Consequences
Alleles Representing Disease-Implicated Variants
Phenotypes
For more details about a specific phenotype click on the relevant allele symbol.
Lethality
Allele
Sterility
Allele
Other Phenotypes
Allele
Phenotype manifest in
Allele
centrosome & cleavage nucleus
centrosome & cleavage nucleus (with Df(3L)21mrx1)
microtubule & oocyte
microtubule & oocyte (with Df(3L)55)
oocyte & chromatin
spindle & cleavage nucleus
spindle & cleavage nucleus (with Df(3L)21mrx1)
spindle & oocyte (with αTub67C1)
spindle & oocyte (with αTub67C2)
Orthologs
Human Orthologs (via DIOPT v9.1)
Species\Gene Symbol
Score
Best Score
Best Reverse Score
Alignment
Complementation?
Transgene?
Homo sapiens (Human) (23)
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
1  
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
1  
2 of 14
No
No
1  
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
1  
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
1  
1 of 14
No
Yes
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1  
Model Organism Orthologs (via DIOPT v9.1)
Species\Gene Symbol
Score
Best Score
Best Reverse Score
Alignment
Complementation?
Transgene?
Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat) (20)
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
4 of 14
No
No
4 of 14
No
No
4 of 14
No
No
4 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
Yes
1 of 14
No
Yes
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
Mus musculus (laboratory mouse) (20)
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
Yes
No
4 of 14
No
No
4 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
Xenopus tropicalis (Western clawed frog) (26)
3 of 13
Yes
No
3 of 13
Yes
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
Yes
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
Yes
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
Yes
1 of 13
No
Yes
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
Yes
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
Danio rerio (Zebrafish) (21)
6 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
4 of 14
No
No
4 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
Caenorhabditis elegans (Nematode, roundworm) (17)
6 of 14
Yes
No
6 of 14
Yes
No
6 of 14
Yes
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
5 of 14
No
No
4 of 14
No
No
3 of 14
No
Yes
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
2 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
1 of 14
No
No
Anopheles gambiae (African malaria mosquito) (13)
8 of 12
Yes
Yes
Arabidopsis thaliana (thale-cress) (17)
7 of 13
Yes
No
7 of 13
Yes
No
7 of 13
Yes
No
7 of 13
Yes
No
7 of 13
Yes
No
7 of 13
Yes
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
2 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Brewer's yeast) (4)
6 of 13
Yes
No
6 of 13
Yes
No
2 of 13
No
No
1 of 13
No
No
Schizosaccharomyces pombe (Fission yeast) (4)
5 of 12
Yes
No
5 of 12
Yes
No
1 of 12
No
No
1 of 12
No
No
Escherichia coli (enterobacterium) (0)
Other Organism Orthologs (via OrthoDB)
Data provided directly from OrthoDB:αTub67C. Refer to their site for version information.
Paralogs
Paralogs (via DIOPT v9.1)
Drosophila melanogaster (Fruit fly) (11)
7 of 13
7 of 13
7 of 13
5 of 13
4 of 13
3 of 13
3 of 13
3 of 13
3 of 13
3 of 13
2 of 13
Human Disease Associations
FlyBase Human Disease Model Reports
    Disease Ontology (DO) Annotations
    Models Based on Experimental Evidence ( 0 )
    Allele
    Disease
    Evidence
    References
    Potential Models Based on Orthology ( 3 )
    Modifiers Based on Experimental Evidence ( 1 )
    Allele
    Disease
    Interaction
    References
    Disease Associations of Human Orthologs (via DIOPT v9.1 and OMIM)
    Note that ortholog calls supported by only 1 or 2 algorithms (DIOPT score < 3) are not shown.
    Functional Complementation Data
    Functional complementation data is computed by FlyBase using a combination of the orthology data obtained from DIOPT and OrthoDB and the allele-level genetic interaction data curated from the literature.
    Interactions
    Summary of Physical Interactions
    Interaction Browsers

    Please see the Physical Interaction reports below for full details
    protein-protein
    Physical Interaction
    Assay
    References
    Summary of Genetic Interactions
    Interaction Browsers

    Please look at the allele data for full details of the genetic interactions
    Starting gene(s)
    Interaction type
    Interacting gene(s)
    Reference
    Starting gene(s)
    Interaction type
    Interacting gene(s)
    Reference
    External Data
    Subunit Structure (UniProtKB)
    Dimer of alpha and beta chains. A typical microtubule is a hollow water-filled tube with an outer diameter of 25 nm and an inner diameter of 15 nM. Alpha-beta heterodimers associate head-to-tail to form protofilaments running lengthwise along the microtubule wall with the beta-tubulin subunit facing the microtubule plus end conferring a structural polarity. Microtubules usually have 13 protofilaments but different protofilament numbers can be found in some organisms and specialized cells.
    (UniProt, P06606 )
    Linkouts
    BioGRID - A database of protein and genetic interactions.
    DroID - A comprehensive database of gene and protein interactions.
    MIST (genetic) - An integrated Molecular Interaction Database
    MIST (protein-protein) - An integrated Molecular Interaction Database
    Pathways
    Signaling Pathways (FlyBase)
    Metabolic Pathways
    FlyBase
    External Links
    External Data
    Linkouts
    KEGG Pathways - A collection of manually drawn pathway maps representing knowledge of molecular interaction, reaction and relation networks.
    Class of Gene
    Genomic Location and Detailed Mapping Data
    Chromosome (arm)
    3L
    Recombination map
    3-31
    Cytogenetic map
    Sequence location
    FlyBase Computed Cytological Location
    Cytogenetic map
    Evidence for location
    67C4-67C4
    Limits computationally determined from genome sequence between P{PZ}fry02240 and P{lacW}l(3)L0539L0539&P{PZ}Dhh1rL562
    Experimentally Determined Cytological Location
    Cytogenetic map
    Notes
    References
    67C-67C
    (determined by in situ hybridisation)
    Experimentally Determined Recombination Data
    Location

    3-32.26 +/- 1.26

    3-

    Notes

    Left arm.

    Stocks and Reagents
    Stocks (17)
    Genomic Clones (25)
    cDNA Clones (41)
     

    Please Note This section lists cDNAs and ESTs that fall within the genomic extent of the gene model, which may include cDNAs and ESTs of genes within introns, or of overlapping genes. Please see JBrowse for alignment of the cDNAs and ESTs to the gene model.

    cDNA clones, fully sequenced
    BDGP DGC clones
    Other clones
      Drosophila Genomics Resource Center cDNA clones

      For each fully sequenced cDNA the DGRC maintains various forms of the cDNA (e.g tagged or untagged) in several different host vectors for subsequent cloning and expression in Drosophila and Drosophila cell lines.

      cDNA Clones, End Sequenced (ESTs)
      RNAi and Array Information
      Linkouts
      DRSC - Results frm RNAi screens
      Antibody Information
      Laboratory Generated Antibodies
      Commercially Available Antibodies
       
      Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank - Monoclonal antibodies for use in research
      Cell Line Information
      Publicly Available Cell Lines
       
        Other Stable Cell Lines
         
          Other Comments

          RNAi screen using dsRNA made from templates generated with primers directed against this gene in S2 cell results in dim staining of microtubules, and a short monopolar spindle. This phenotype can be observed when the screen is performed with or without Cdc27 dsRNA.

          sub mutants do not interact with alleles of γTub37C, αTub67C, msps, tacc or wisp.

          Mutations in αTub67C specifically impair achiasmate segregation.

          In a sample of 79 genes with multiple introns, 33 showed significant heterogeneity in G+C content among introns of the same gene and significant positive correspondence between the intron and the third codon position G+C content within genes. These results are consistent with selection adding against preferred codons at the start of genes.

          The αTub67C gene product is involved in the formation of the sperm aster, cleavage spindle apparatus formation or function and the differentiation of the embryonic nervous system.

          Nurse cell-specific genes are functional in the pseudonurse cells of otu mutants, but the transport of pum, otu, ovo and bcd RNAs to the cytoplasm is affected.

          Mutant females produce androgenetic offspring, the mutant protein results in an aberrant oocyte- and early-embryo-specific α-tubulin. The production of androgenetic exceptions is greatly enhanced when the parental females are heterozygous for αTub67C and homozygous for ncdD.

          A PCR based assay has been used to determine whether the encoded mRNAs exhibit changes in poly(A) status upon translational activation.

          αTub67C is required for nuclear division in the oocyte and early embryo. Both meiosis and cleavage stage mitoses are severely affected by mutations that result in a substantial decrease in the αTub67C/αTub84B+αTub84D ratio, though an increase has little effect on meiosis while still disrupting mitotic spindle formation.

          This maternally provided tubulin is found in all classes of microtubule from syncitial blastoderm to completion of germ band retraction, subsequently it is only retained in the CNS. Its localisation is not affected by mutations in other tubulins.

          In D.melanogaster, two multigene families, each made up of four members, code for α- and β-tubulins. Tubulins are a highly conserved family of proteins that are the main structural components of microtubules in mitotic and meiotic spindles, cilia, flagella, neural processes and the cytoskeleton; nontubulin proteins (MAPS or microtubule-associated proteins) are involved along with tubulins in the formation of specialized microtubules (FBrf0045282; FBrf0046966). αTub67C is transcribed in the nurse cells, the transcript is maternally inherited; the transcript accumulates in 0- to 3-hr embryos and adult ovaries (FBrf0037623; FBrf0049502). A stable pool of αTub67C tubulin is found in ovaries, unfertilized eggs and embryos, but synthesis of the protein probably only occurs in the ovary (FBrf0049502).

          Loss-of-function mutations are female sterile. These alleles show a dominant reduction in female fertility (FBrf0058107).

          Relationship to Other Genes
          Source for database merge of
          Additional comments
          Nomenclature History
          Source for database identify of

          Source for identity of: αTub67C CG8308

          Nomenclature comments
          Etymology

          Mutation is named "Tomaj" after a Hungarian clan that vanished by the beginning of the 14th century but their names survived in the names of settlements.

          Named for a Hungarian family that vanished by the beginning of the 14th century.

          Synonyms and Secondary IDs (63)
          Reported As
          Symbol Synonym
          Fs(3)Sz14
          Fs(3)Sz22
          Fs(3)Tom
          α-Tubulin67C
          α4-tubulin
          α4t
          αTub4
          Name Synonyms
          Alpha-Tubulin at 67C
          Female sterile (3) Kavar
          Tubulin at 67C
          alpha Tubulin 67C
          alpha tubulin
          tubulin67C
          α-Tubulin at 67C
          αTubulin
          αTubulin 67C
          Secondary FlyBase IDs
          • FBgn0001055
          • FBgn0004236
          • FBgn0001067
          • FBgn0003883
          Datasets (0)
          Study focus (0)
          Experimental Role
          Project
          Project Type
          Title
          Study result (0)
          Result
          Result Type
          Title
          External Crossreferences and Linkouts ( 41 )
          Sequence Crossreferences
          NCBI Gene - Gene integrates information from a wide range of species. A record may include nomenclature, Reference Sequences (RefSeqs), maps, pathways, variations, phenotypes, and links to genome-, phenotype-, and locus-specific resources worldwide.
          GenBank Nucleotide - A collection of sequences from several sources, including GenBank, RefSeq, TPA, and PDB.
          GenBank Protein - A collection of sequences from several sources, including translations from annotated coding regions in GenBank, RefSeq and TPA, as well as records from SwissProt, PIR, PRF, and PDB.
          RefSeq - A comprehensive, integrated, non-redundant, well-annotated set of reference sequences including genomic, transcript, and protein.
          UniProt/GCRP - The gene-centric reference proteome (GCRP) provides a 1:1 mapping between genes and UniProt accessions in which a single 'canonical' isoform represents the product(s) of each protein-coding gene.
          UniProt/Swiss-Prot - Manually annotated and reviewed records of protein sequence and functional information
          Other crossreferences
          AlphaFold DB - AlphaFold provides open access to protein structure predictions for the human proteome and other key proteins of interest, to accelerate scientific research.
          BDGP expression data - Patterns of gene expression in Drosophila embryogenesis
          DRscDB - A single-cell RNA-seq resource for data mining and data comparison across species
          EMBL-EBI Single Cell Expression Atlas - Single cell expression across species
          FlyAtlas2 - A Drosophila melanogaster expression atlas with RNA-Seq, miRNA-Seq and sex-specific data
          FlyMine - An integrated database for Drosophila genomics
          KEGG Genes - Molecular building blocks of life in the genomic space.
          MARRVEL_MODEL - MARRVEL (model organism gene)
          Linkouts
          BioGRID - A database of protein and genetic interactions.
          Drosophila Genomics Resource Center - Drosophila Genomics Resource Center (DGRC) cDNA clones
          DroID - A comprehensive database of gene and protein interactions.
          DRSC - Results frm RNAi screens
          Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank - Monoclonal antibodies for use in research
          Eukaryotic Promoter Database - A collection of databases of experimentally validated promoters for selected model organisms.
          FlyCyc Genes - Genes from a BioCyc PGDB for Dmel
          Fly-FISH - A database of Drosophila embryo and larvae mRNA localization patterns
          Flygut - An atlas of the Drosophila adult midgut
          KEGG Pathways - A collection of manually drawn pathway maps representing knowledge of molecular interaction, reaction and relation networks.
          MIST (genetic) - An integrated Molecular Interaction Database
          MIST (protein-protein) - An integrated Molecular Interaction Database
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