Mutation detail:
| Mutation site | 26600C>T |
| Virus | SARS-CoV-2 |
| Mutation level |
Nucleotide level |
| Gene/protein/region type | M |
| Gene ID | 43740571 |
| Country | France |
| Mutation type |
- |
| Genotype/subtype/clade | - |
| Sample |
Human |
| Variants | - |
| Viral reference sequence | NC_045512.2 |
| Drug/antibody/vaccine | - |
| Transmissibility |
- |
| Transmission mechanism | - |
| Pathogenicity |
- |
| Pathogenicity mechanism | - |
| Immune escape mutation | - |
| Immune escape mechanism | - |
| RT-PCR primers probes | - |
Protein detail:
| Protein name | Membrane Glycoprotein |
| Uniprot protein ID | P0DTC5 |
| Protein length | 222 amino acids |
| Protein description | The membrane protein is present in high amounts out of all proteins in coronaviruses . Its length spans to about 220-260 amino acids with a short length N terminal domain, attached to triple transmembrane domains that are further connected to a carboxyl-terminal domain and belong to the N-linked glycosylated proteins with a conserved domain of 12 amino acids. Out of the three TDM, the first one is capable enough to encourage self-association of M proteins, improved membrane affinity, and retention in Golgi. The membrane protein is a transmembrane glycoprotein, is the most abundant structural protein in the virus particle and has been suggested as an antiviral drug target. |
Literature information:
| Pubmed ID | 33556961 |
| Clinical information | Yes |
| Disease | - |
| Published year | 2021 |
| Journal | JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES |
| Title | Long-Term Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Infectiousness Among Three Immunocompromised Patients: From Prolonged Viral Shedding to SARS-CoV-2 Superinfection |
| Author | Hassan Tarhini, Amelie Recoing, Antoine Bridier-Nahmias, Mayda Rahi, Celeste Lambert |
| Evidence | Figure 1 |