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IL-2 receptor

The interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R) is a heterotrimeric protein expressed on the surface of certain immune cells, such as lymphocytes, that binds and responds to a cytokine called IL-2. The interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R) is a heterotrimeric protein expressed on the surface of certain immune cells, such as lymphocytes, that binds and responds to a cytokine called IL-2. IL-2 binds to the IL-2 receptor, which has three forms, generated by different combinations of three different proteins, often referred to as 'chains': α (alpha) (also called IL-2Rα, CD25, or Tac antigen), β (beta) (also called IL-2Rβ, or CD122), and γ (gamma) (also called IL-2Rγ, γc, common gamma chain, or CD132); these subunits are also parts of receptors for other cytokines.:713 The β and γ chains of the IL-2R are members of the type I cytokine receptor family.

[ "Cytotoxic T cell", "T cell", "Multipotential Colony-Stimulating Factor", "Memory T-cell differentiation", "Regulatory T-Lymphocytes", "Immune tolerance in pregnancy", "FOXP3 protein" ]
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