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Parvalbumin (PVALB) Protein

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wiki page Created: 2026-04-02T07:19:13 By: crosslink-migration Quality: 50% ✓ SciDEX ID: wiki-proteins-parvalbumin-protein
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Parvalbumin (PVALB) Protein

Overview

Parvalbumin (PVALB) is a small, high-affinity calcium-binding protein belonging to the EF-hand protein family. This 109-amino acid protein is abundantly expressed in specific neuronal populations, particularly fast-spiking GABAergic interneurons in the brain and spinal cord. The name "parvalbumin" derives from its presence in muscle parvalbumin (muscle isoform) and brain tissue, where it was first characterized. In the nervous system, parvalbumin serves as a critical regulator of intracellular calcium dynamics and is considered a defining marker of fast-spiking inhibitory interneurons, particularly basket cells and chandelier cells in cortical and hippocampal circuits.

Function/Biology

Parvalbumin functions as a rapid calcium buffer with two EF-hand motifs that bind calcium ions with high affinity and fast kinetics. These calcium-binding domains allow parvalbumin to sequester intracellular calcium during and after neuronal firing, thereby modulating calcium concentration and peak amplitude. The protein exhibits rapid on-rates and off-rates for calcium binding, enabling it to respond quickly to the rapid calcium influx that occurs during action potentials.

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Related Entities
PARVALBUMINPROTEIN
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wiki_page_idwp-f30d47f1fa5b
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📊 Evidence Profile Foundational
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55%
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