C2orf16
C2orf16 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Aliases | C2orf16, chromosome 2 open reading frame 16 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
External IDs | HomoloGene: 82476; GeneCards: C2orf16; OMA:C2orf16 - orthologs | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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C2orf16 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the C2orf16 gene. Isoform 2 of this protein (NCBI ID: CAH18189.1[4] henceforth referred to as C2orf16) is 1,984 amino acids long.[5] The gene contains 1 exon and is located at 2p23.3.[6] Aliases for C2orf16 include Open Reading Frame 16 on Chromosome 2 and P-S-E-R-S-H-H-S Repeats Containing Sequence.[7]
68 orthologs are known for this gene, including in mice and sheep, but no paralogs have been found.[8]
Gene
The C2orf16 isoform 2 is a 6.2 kb, 1 exon gene at locus 2p23.3, and contains P-S-E-R-S-H-H-S repeats on the C-terminal side of the gene from amino acid 1,559 to 1,903. These repeats appear to have arisen from a transposable element. Primates show more P-S-E-R-S-H-H-S repeats than other mammalian orthologs do.[6]
Expression
C2orf16 is found to be highly expressed in the testes[9] and a retinoic acid and mitogen-treated human embryonic stem cell line,[10] but is not known to be expressed differently in age or disease phenotypes.[11] C2orf16 is also seen to have high expression in the pre-implantation embryo from the 4-cell embryo stage to the blastocyst stage.[12]
C2orf16 is not seen to have rapamycin sensitive expression.[13] C2orf16 is also seen to significantly increase expression in c-MYC knockdown breast cancer cells.[14]
mRNA
Isoforms
Two isoforms exist of C2orf16. Isoform 1 is 5,388 amino acids long encoded in 5 exons over 16,401 base pairs. Isoform 2 uses an alternate start site of transcription and is considerably shorter at 1,984 amino acids long encoded in 1 exon over 6,200 base pairs.[8]
Expression Regulation
One miRNA is predicted to bind to the 3'UTR of C2orf16, accession number MI0005564.[15][16]
Protein
C2orf16 has a predicted molecular weight of 224kD and a predicted isoelectric point of 10.08,[17] values that are relatively constant between orthologs. The protein includes higher than average composition of serine, histidine, and arginine and a lower than average composition of alanine.[18]
Compositional Features
A positive charge cluster is found from amino acid residues 1,274 to 1,302.[18]
An arginine rich region is found from amino acids 1,545 to 1,933, a serine rich region is found from amino acids 1,568 to 1,934, and a histidine rich region is found from amino acids 1,630 to 1,853.[18]
A dot matrix analysis[19] reveals a heavily repeated region from approximately residue 1,500 to 1,984, this being the P-S-E-R-S-H-H-S repeat. a small band of dots at approximately amino acid 1,200 denotes a half repeat of the P-S-E-R-S-H-H-S sequence.
C2orf16 isoform 2 has no transmembrane domains,[20] and is predicted to be localized to the nucleus after translation due to two nuclear localization sequences predicted at residues 1,233 and 1,281.[21] No nuclear export sequence is conserved amongst orthologs,[22] suggesting C2orf16 is not meant to leave the nucleus after import. No N- or C- terminal modifications were predicted.[23][24][25][26]
Sub-cellular Localization
C2orf16 is predicted to be localized to the nucleus after transcription.[8]
Structure
The 3D structure of C2orf16 is predicted to have three major domains. Domain 1 is from amino acids 1 to 662, domain 2 is from amino acids 674 to 1,487, and domain 3 is from amino acids 1,488 to 1,984.[27] Domain 1 and 2 are predicted to be connected via a stretch of 12 amino acids not otherwise organized into a secondary structure allowing flexibility between domains 1 and 2. Domain 2 is predicted to have protein interacting domains for transcription factors.[27] Domain 3 is predicted to follow a "balls on a string" structure[27] and has many sites for possible phosphorylation.[28]
Protein Interactions
C2orf16 has been shown to have a physical interaction with proto-oncogene Myc by tandem affinity purification.[29]
Ortholog Phylogeny
68 orthologs are known for C2orf16.[8] The protein seems to have appeared in the mammalian evolutionary history 320 million years ago, around the divergence of mammals from reptiles. This history would explain why orthologs do not exist in amphibians, reptiles, birds, nor other more distantly related species.[30]
Any orthologs from species more distant from humans than other mammals are likely not related in function, however, the P-S-E-R-S-H-H-S repeat is present in bony fishes, crustaceans, stramenopiles including potato blight, plantae, and prokaryotes.[30]
The transposon repeat may have been reintroduced to mammals by a viral vector.
Repeat Sequence
The P-S-E-R-S-H-H-S repeat sequence is seen to be conserved in orthologs for C2orf16, and is conserved in organisms as distantly related as oomycete slime mold[31] and plants including the chloroplasts of Ashby's Wattle.[32] The S-P-S-E-R portion of the repeat is seen to be the most important for conservation, as seen by alignment with these orthologs and by creation of a Logo.[33]
The conservation analysis of the repeat shows the initial S-P-S is highly conserved, possibly for phosphorylation(S) and structure(P), and the R is almost completely conserved, mutating to a Lysine in some orthologs,[32] implying the positive charge is necessary for the purpose of the repeat.
The 3D shape of the repeat sequence is unclear as it has been predicted to be either balls-on-a-string[34] or an antiparallel beta-sheet[6] structure.
Function
C2orf16 isoform 2 is predicted to have a possible function in mitosis regulation through its nuclear localization,[8][21] predicted transcription factor binding site,[27] physical association with Myc,[29] and increased expression in c-MYC knockdown breast cancer cells.[14]
Clinical Significance
There are four patents on record for C2orf16, one each involving: cancerous PPP2RIA and ARID1A mutations,[35] Alzheimer's predisposition,[36] viral vaccine diversity,[37] and copy number variation relation to common variable immunodeficiency.[38] C2orf16 is also shown to have increased expression in some breast cancer lines,[14] as well as being involved with Myc[29] which is a common oncogene, making C2orf16 a possible oncogene to target in cancer treatments.
References
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- ^ "EST Profile – Hs.131021". www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
- ^ Xie D, Chen CC, Ptaszek LM, Xiao S, Cao X, Fang F, Ng HH, Lewin HA, Cowan C, Zhong S (June 2010). "Rewirable gene regulatory networks in the preimplantation embryonic development of three mammalian species". Genome Research. 20 (6): 804–15. doi:10.1101/gr.100594.109. PMC 2877577. PMID 20219939.
- ^ Petrich AM, Leshchenko V, Kuo PY, Xia B, Thirukonda VK, Ulahannan N, Gordon S, Fazzari MJ, Ye BH, Sparano JA, Parekh S (May 2012). "Akt inhibitors MK-2206 and nelfinavir overcome mTOR inhibitor resistance in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma". Clinical Cancer Research. 18 (9): 2534–44. doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-11-1407. PMC 3889476. PMID 22338016.
- ^ a b c Cappellen D, Schlange T, Bauer M, Maurer F, Hynes NE (January 2007). "Novel c-MYC target genes mediate differential effects on cell proliferation and migration". EMBO Reports. 8 (1): 70–6. doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7400849. PMC 1796762. PMID 17159920.
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- ^ Cserzö M, Eisenhaber F, Eisenhaber B, Simon I (September 2002). "On filtering false positive transmembrane protein predictions". Protein Engineering. 15 (9): 745–52. doi:10.1093/protein/15.9.745. PMID 12456873.
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- ^ la Cour T, Kiemer L, Mølgaard A, Gupta R, Skriver K, Brunak S (June 2004). "Analysis and prediction of leucine-rich nuclear export signals". Protein Engineering, Design & Selection. 17 (6): 527–36. doi:10.1093/protein/gzh062. PMID 15314210.
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- ^ a b c "PSICQUIC View". www.ebi.ac.uk. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
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- ^ "cyst germination specific acidic repeat protein precursor [Phytophthora infestans]". NCBI. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
- ^ a b "accD (chloroplast) [Acacia ashbyae] – Protein – NCBI". www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
- ^ "WebLogo – Create Sequence Logos". weblogo.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
- ^ Zhang Y (January 2008). "I-TASSER server for protein 3D structure prediction". BMC Bioinformatics. 9 (1): 40. doi:10.1186/1471-2105-9-40. PMC 2245901. PMID 18215316.
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