LongevityMap variant

Entry Details

Longevity Association
Non-significant
Population
Irish
Study Design
A 22 bp deletion was examined in 180 aged individuals (90-97 years) and 180 controls (19-45 years)
Conclusions
There was no observed association between this common polymorphic variation and the aged Irish population
Identifier
KIR3DL1
In Other Studies (IDs)
159
Cytogenetic Location
19q13.42
UCSC Genome Browser
View 19q13.42 on the UCSC genome browser

Gene details

HGNC symbol
KIR3DL1
Aliases
KIR; NKB1; NKAT3; NKB1B; NKAT-3; CD158E1; KIR3DL1/S1 
Common name
killer cell immunoglobulin like receptor, three Ig domains and long cytoplasmic tail 1 
Description
Killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) are transmembrane glycoproteins expressed by natural killer cells and subsets of T cells. The KIR genes are polymorphic and highly homologous and they are found in a cluster on chromosome 19q13.4 within the 1 Mb leukocyte receptor complex (LRC). The gene content of the KIR gene cluster varies among haplotypes, although several "framework" genes are found in all haplotypes (KIR3DL3, KIR3DP1, KIR3DL4, KIR3DL2). The KIR proteins are classified by the number of extracellular immunoglobulin domains (2D or 3D) and by whether they have a long (L) or short (S) cytoplasmic domain. KIR proteins with the long cytoplasmic domain transduce inhibitory signals upon ligand binding via an immune tyrosine-based inhibitory motif (ITIM), while KIR proteins with the short cytoplasmic domain lack the ITIM motif and instead associate with the TYRO protein tyrosine kinase binding protein to transduce activating signals. The ligands for several KIR proteins are subsets of HLA class I molecules; thus, KIR proteins are thought to play an important role in regulation of the immune response. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008]
Other longevity studies of this gene
1
OMIM
604946
Ensembl
ENSG00000167633
UniProt/Swiss-Prot
KI3L1_HUMAN
Entrez Gene
3811
UniGene
645228
HapMap
View on HapMap

Homologs in model organisms

Mus musculus
Kir3dl2
Mus musculus
Kir3dl1
Rattus norvegicus
Kir3dl1

References

Ross et al. (2004)

Other variants which are also part of this study