Annotated protein:Small ribosomal subunit protein uS15 (40S ribosomal protein S13). Gene symbol: RPS13. Taxonomy: Rattus norvegicus (Rat). Uniprot ID: P62278
antibody wiki:
SynGO gene info:SynGO data @ RPS13
Ontology domain:Biological Process
SynGO term:translation at postsynapse (GO:0140242)
Annotated paper:Peng J, et al. "Semiquantitative proteomic analysis of rat forebrain postsynaptic density fractions by mass spectrometry" J Biol Chem. 2004 May 14;279(20):21003-11 PMID:15020595
Figure(s):Table S1
Annotation description:14/5/2018 Pim
rule: NAS_CPLX_2
rationale: Polyribosomes are present in dendritic spines (PMID:12165474, electron microscopy). The ribosome is the central holoenzyme in the process of "translation (GO:0006412)". RS13 is a generally accepted constituent of the ribosome that together with other ribosomal subunits contributes to the intrinsic activity of the ribosomal complex.. No functions of RS13 are known independent from the ribosomal complex. Inference to term "translation (GO:0006412)" occurs_in "postsynapse (GO:0098794:)" is trivial.
C_ref CC: PMID:12165474 (dendritic spine head)
P_inf CC: SynGO ID #613
P_inf CC additional:
- Bayes et al.(2012), PMID:23071613, TableS1, prep:psd
- Distler et al.(2014), PMID:25211037, Table S1, prep:synapse
Complex membership: RS13 protein is a fixed member of the 40S ribosomal subunit complex.
- Shown in crystal structure (PMID:28138070, see Fig.1, name: us15)
- GO annotations to "structural constituent of ribosome (GO:0003735)" (ISO and IEA)
Evidence tracking, Biological System:
Evidence tracking, Protein Targeting:
Evidence tracking, Experiment Assay:
Non-tracable Author Statement (NAS):This annotation required some inference over additional information/literature, and is not solely based on observations made in the annotated paper by its original authors.
Annotator(s):Daniela Dieterich (ORCID:0000-0002-9880-1214)
Rainer Pielot (ORCID:0000-0002-9681-3318)
Karl-Heinz Smalla (ORCID:0000-0002-0269-0311)
Eckart Gundelfinger (ORCID:0000-0001-9377-7414)
Lab:Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology (LIN), Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Otto von Guericke University, Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences (CBBS), Magdeburg, Germany
Additional literature:Fig. 2 demonstrates the localization of polyribosomes in the base, neck and head of spines. @ PMID:12165474
SynGO annotation ID:3643
Dataset release (version):20231201
View annotation as GO-CAM model:Gene Ontology