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macrophilin

Macrophilin is a term that has been used in the scientific literature to refer to a protein associated with macrophages, but it is not a standard or universally recognized protein name. In many publications, macrophilin is a provisional label assigned to a protein detected in macrophages whose exact identity, sequence, and function were not fully characterized at the time of reporting. Because there is no widely accepted nomenclature for macrophilin, the term can refer to different, unrelated proteins in different studies.

Consequently, there is no single, agreed-upon set of properties for macrophilin. In some reports, macrophilin has

To determine what a specific reference to macrophilin refers to, readers should consult the primary source

appeared
in
studies
of
macrophage
differentiation,
activation,
or
inflammatory
signaling,
sometimes
as
a
cytosolic
factor
or
as
a
secreted
protein.
However,
the
evidence
is
often
preliminary,
and
functional
conclusions
are
contingent
on
the
specific
experimental
context
and
organism.
There
is
also
a
risk
of
conflating
macrophilin
with
other
well-characterized
macrophage-related
proteins,
such
as
MIF
or
various
cytokines,
if
the
term
is
not
carefully
defined
in
a
given
article.
for
the
exact
identity,
species,
and
gene
or
protein
identifier
involved.
Database
searches
using
the
reported
organism
and
study
details
are
recommended
to
locate
the
corresponding
protein
entry
and
to
assess
any
reported
function,
domain
structure,
or
interactions.