BaseSpace
Correlation
Engine-Public
Sign In
Register
Correlation Engine 2.0
Home
My Data
Bookmarks
Collaborations
Inbox
Import Your Data
QuickView
FAQ
What is QuickView?
What can my QuickView results tell me?
What are the sources for the General Info tab in QuickView?
More QuickView FAQs
Back to top
QuickView
Curated
Studies
Body
Atlas
Disease
Atlas
Pharmaco
Atlas
Knockdown
Atlas
Genetic
Markers
Pathway
Enrichment
Literature
Clinical
Trials
0
Meta-
Analysis
QuickView
Search sequence regions
(e.g.
Early pregnancy factor
,
Rapamycin
,
rs2476601
,
KLK3
,
Angiogenesis
,
HIV infection
)
Organisms
Chromosomes
Start
Stop
Homo Sapiens
Mus Musculus
Rattus Norvegicus
C. Elegans
D. Melanogaster
Saccharomyces Cerevisiae
QuickView
Go back to main search
Bookmark
Forward
QuickView
for
DCP1
(gene)
Summary
General Info
Body Atlas
Most Correlated Tissues
No tissues found
Explore Body Atlas Results
Disease Atlas
Most Correlated Diseases
Male infertility
Traumatic injury
Aging
Viral disease
Explore Disease Atlas Results
Pharmaco Atlas
Most Correlated Compounds
Ecdysone
Quercetin
Explore Pharmaco Atlas Results
Knockdown Atlas
Most Correlated Gene Perturbations
dcap-1
pie-1
ogt-1
NKX3-1
tkv
Explore Knockdown Atlas Results
Curated Studies
Most Correlated Studies
Loading...
Explore Curated Studies Results
Literature
Most Relevant Literature
Spatio-temporal characterization of the antiviral activity of the XRN1-DCP1/2 aggregation against cy…
Diffuse decapping enzyme DCP2 accumulates in DCP1 foci under heat stress in Arabidopsis thaliana.
The activation of the decapping enzyme DCP2 by DCP1 occurs on the EDC4 scaffold and involves a conse…
Not4-dependent translational repression is important for cellular protein homeostasis in yeast.
A direct interaction between DCP1 and XRN1 couples mRNA decapping to 5' exonucleolytic degradation.
Explore Literature Results
Clinical Trials
Most Relevant Clinical Trials
There were no clinical trials for DCP1
Explore Clinical Trials Results
search
→
result
search
→
result
See more about this page
See complete FAQ