- collagen type I trimer
A collagen trimer containing alpha(I) chains. The most common form of type I collagen is a heterotrimer containing two alpha1(I) chains and one alpha2(I) chain; homotrimers containing three alpha1(I) chains are also found. Type I collagen triple helices associate to form banded fibrils.
- synaptic vesicle recycling
The trafficking of synaptic vesicles from the pre-synaptic membrane so the vesicle can dock and prime for another round of exocytosis and neurotransmitter release. Recycling occurs after synaptic vesicle exocytosis, and is necessary to replenish presynaptic vesicle pools, sustain transmitter release and preserve the structural integrity of the presynaptic membrane. Recycling can occur following transient fusion with the presynaptic membrane (kiss and run), or via endocytosis of presynaptic membrane.
- type-I cohesin domain binding
Binding to a type-I cohesin domain of a protein. Type-I cohesin domain is the binding partner of type-I dockerin domain.
- MHC class I receptor activity
Combining with an MHC class I protein complex to initiate a change in cellular activity. Class I here refers to classical class I molecules.
- rhamnogalacturonan endolyase activity
Catalysis of the reaction: H2O + a rhamnogalacturonan type I = [rhamnogalacturonan I oligosaccharide]-alpha-L-rhamnose + 4-deoxy-4,5-unsaturated D-galactopyranosyluronate-[rhamnogalacturonan I oligosaccharide].
- MHC class I protein complex assembly
The aggregation, arrangement and bonding together of a set of components to form an MHC class I protein complex. Class I here refers to classical class I molecules.