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. 2023 Feb 24;14:1129191. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2023.1129191

Figure 2.

Figure 2

NFκB family members, homo and heterodimers and their roles in T cells. Second column shows the five NFκB subunits, p50, RelA, c-Rel, p52 and RelB that associate with each other to form fifteen potential dimers. Of these, three heterodimers (p50/RelA; p50/c-Rel and p52/RelB) are well known for their roles in T cell function and differentiation, while the role of the remaining five homodimers and seven heterodimers is unknown in T cells (indicated by? in the table). A role in other cells is indicated in the table. The table also shows whether any of the dimers is preferentially induced by canonical or non-canonical NFκB signaling (column 4) or whether it is the result of processing of precursor proteins p100 and p105 (column 1).