The domain within your query sequence starts at position 25 and ends at position 78; the E-value for the FGF domain shown below is 9.4e-14.

KPKLLYCSNGGHFLRILPDGTVDGTRDRSDQHIQLQLSAESAGEVYIKGTETGQ

FGF

FGF
PFAM accession number:PF00167
Interpro abstract (IPR002209):

Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) [ (PUBMED:2549857) (PUBMED:3072709) ] are a family of multifunctional proteins, often referred to as 'promiscuous growth factors' due to their diverse actions on multiple cell types [ (PUBMED:1705486) (PUBMED:8760337) ]. FGFs are mitogens, which stimulate growth or differentiation of cells of mesodermal or neuroectodermal origin. The function of FGFs in developmental processes include mesoderm induction, anterior-posterior patterning, limb development, and neural induction and development. In mature tissues, they are involved in diverse processes including keratinocyte organisation and wound healing [ (PUBMED:11276432) (PUBMED:23000357) (PUBMED:15689573) (PUBMED:10441498) (PUBMED:23108135) (PUBMED:23016864) ]. FGF involvement is critical during normal development of both vertebrates and invertebrates, and irregularities in their function leads to a range of developmental defects [ (PUBMED:1649700) (PUBMED:11746231) (PUBMED:14745970) (PUBMED:8978613) ]. Fibroblast growth factors are heparin-binding proteins and interactions with cell-surface-associated heparan sulfate proteoglycans have been shown to be essential for FGF signal transduction. FGFs have internal pseudo-threefold symmetry (beta-trefoil topology) [ (PUBMED:10830168) ]. There are currently over 20 different FGF family members that have been identified in mammals, all of which are structurally related signaling molecules [ (PUBMED:8652550) (PUBMED:11276432) ]. They exert their effects through four distinct membrane fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs), FGFR1 to FGFR4 [ (PUBMED:7583099) ], which belong to the tyrosine kinase superfamily. Upon binding to FGF, the receptors dimerize and their intracellular tyrosine kinase domains become active [ (PUBMED:7583099) ].

GO function:growth factor activity (GO:0008083)

This is a PFAM domain. For full annotation and more information, please see the PFAM entry FGF