Receptor tyrosine kinase which binds promiscuously transmembrane ephrin-B family ligands residing on adjacent cells, leading to contact-dependent bidirectional signaling into neighboring cells. The signaling pathway downstream of the receptor is referred to as forward signaling while the signaling pathway downstream of the ephrin ligand is referred to as reverse signaling. Functions in axon guidance during development.
Involved in the guidance of commissural axons, that form a major interhemispheric connection between the 2 temporal lobes of the cerebral cortex. Also involved in guidance of contralateral inner ear efferent growth cones at the midline and of retinal ganglion cell axons to the optic disk. In addition to axon guidance, also regulates dendritic spines development and maturation and stimulates the formation of excitatory synapses.
Upon activation by EFNB1, abolishes the ARHGEF15-mediated negative regulation on excitatory synapse formation. Controls other aspects of development including angiogenesis, palate development and in inner ear development through regulation of endolymph production. Forward and reverse signaling through the EFNB2/EPHB2 complex regulate movement and adhesion of cells that tubularize the urethra and septate the cloaca.
May function as a tumor suppressor. May be involved in the regulation of platelet activation and blood coagulation (PubMed:30213874)
Heterotetramer upon binding of the ligand (By similarity). The heterotetramer is composed of an ephrin dimer and a receptor dimer (PubMed:17897949). Interacts (via PDZ-binding motif) with GRIP1 and PICK1 (via PDZ domain) (By similarity).
Interacts with ARHGEF15; mediates ARHGEF15 phosphorylation, ubiquitination and degradation by the proteasome (By similarity). Interacts with AQP1; involved in endolymph production in the inner ear (By similarity). Interacts with SPSB1 and SPSB4 (PubMed:28931592).
The phosphorylated form interacts with RASA1 (via SH2 domain 1) (By similarity). Interacts with EFNA5 (By similarity). Interacts with SH2D3C (By similarity)
Brain, heart, lung, kidney, placenta, pancreas, liver and skeletal muscle. Preferentially expressed in fetal brain
A malignancy originating in tissues of the prostate. Most prostate cancers are adenocarcinomas that develop in the acini of the prostatic ducts. Other rare histopathologic types of prostate cancer that occur in approximately 5% of patients include small cell carcinoma, mucinous carcinoma, prostatic ductal carcinoma, transitional cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma, adenoid cystic carcinoma (basaloid), signet-ring cell carcinoma and neuroendocrine carcinoma.
An autosomal recessive disorder characterized by increased bleeding tendency due to platelet dysfunction. Clinical features include epistaxis, hematomas, bleeding after minor injuries, and menorrhagia.
No mutation information available.
Genes with an experimentally identified or computationally predicted synthetic-lethal relationship to EPHB2, aggregated across our SSL data sources. Click any partner node to view that gene’s page.
Nodes and edges are coloured by the SSL data source. Partners appearing in more than one source are shown in grey.
No clinical trials information available.