actin

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See also: actin' and actin-

English

Etymology

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From Ancient Greek ἀκτίς (aktís, ray), based on the shape of the filament formed, and the English chemical suffix -in.

Noun

actin (countable and uncountable, plural actins)

  1. (biochemistry, uncountable) A globular structural protein that polymerizes in a helical fashion to form an actin filament (or microfilament).
    • 2012, Elaine N. Marieb & Katja Hoehn, Human Anatomy & Physiology, 8th ed., chapter 9 "Muscles and Muscle Tissue", page 281.
      Actin has kidney-shaped polypeptide subunits, called globular actin or G actin, which bear the active sites to which the myosin heads attach during contraction.
  2. (biochemistry, countable) One of the six isoforms of actin.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Spanish: actina

Translations

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