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B
MOLECULAR TARGETUniProt: P51164

ATP4B

ATPase H+/K+ transporting subunit beta

25 compounds · BiohacksAI corpus v20260307-01

25
compounds
Compounds
25
Gene Symbol
ATP4B
NCBI Gene
496

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About ATP4B

ATP4B (ATPase H+/K+ transporting subunit beta) is a biological target studied in biomedical research. The BiohacksAI corpus identifies 25 compounds with documented interactions with this target, based on BindingDB assay data and PubMed literature.

View ATP4B on UniProt →
Compounds Targeting ATP4B (25)
1
Cimetidineorganic
0
studies
0.69
confidence
2
Aloe Vera
0.50
confidence
3
Artemisia Capillaris
0.50
confidence
4
Bombyx Mori
0.50
confidence
5
Carthamus Tinctorius
0.50
confidence
6
Cimicifuga Heracleifolia
0.50
confidence
7
Citrus Reticulata
0.50
confidence
8
Coix Lacryma
0.50
confidence
500
studies
0.50
confidence
10
Cuscuta Chinensis
0.50
confidence
11
Leonurus Japonicus
0.50
confidence
12
Ligusticum Chuanxiong
0.50
confidence
13
Lindera Aggregata
0.50
confidence
14
Lonicera Japonica
0.50
confidence
15
Morus Alba
0.50
confidence
300
studies
0.50
confidence
17
Perilla Frutescens
0.50
confidence
18
Polygala Tenuifolia
0.50
confidence
19
Prunella Vulgaris
0.50
confidence
20
Prunus Armeniaca
0.50
confidence
21
Prunus Mume
0.50
confidence
22
Scolopendra Subspinipes
0.50
confidence
23
Taraxacum Mongolicum
0.50
confidence
24
Verbena Officinalis
0.50
confidence
25
Vigna Radiata
0.50
confidence
Top 25 compounds by confidence score. Derived from BindingDB assay data.
Data Source
Corpusv20260307-01
SourceBindingDB · ChEMBL · PubMed

All data is computationally derived from published research. Not medical advice. Independent validation required.